I
"•a
)
No. 1. June 20th, 1914.
Edited by WYHDHAM LEWIS.
REVIEW OF THE GREAT ENGLISH VORTEX.
2/6 Published Quarterly.
10/6 Yearly Subscription.
London :
JOHN LANE,
TMe Bodley Head.
New Y*rk i Jolui Lane CoMpany.
Toronto: Bell & Cockburn.
Copies may also be obtained from—
MR. WYNDHAM LEWIS,
Rebel Art Centre,
38, Great Ormoad Street,
QHeen's Square, W.C.
(Hours, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.)
aud at
5, Holland Place Chambers,
Church Street,
Kensington.
Printed by Uvwtdg* and Co. (T\U.), ft. TftoatV Ro*4, Herieidtti.
ERRATA.
(Mistakes in " ENEMY OF STARS," etc.)
Page ee.^MIMES (instead of mines).
Page 62.— EVENING (instead of coming) .
Page 8ft.— ASCETICISM (instead of aseticlsm) .
Also note the wrong placing of Page " The Play," which should come between
Pages 6ft and 61.
Page 61.— MAD BLASTS OF SUNLIGHT (instead of blasts sunlight).
CONTENTS.
Great Preliminary Vortex—
Manifesto — I.
Manifesto — II
Manifesto — I.
Manifesto — II
Poems, by Ezra Pound.
Enemy of the Stars, by Wyndham Lewis.
The Saddest Story, by Ford Maddox liueffer
Indissoluble Matrimony, by Rebecca West. .
" Inner Necessity " : Review of Kandinsky's book, by Edward Wadsworth
Vortices and Notes, by Wyndham Lewis—
1. " Life is the Important Thing." ...
2. Futurism, Magic and Life
3. Notes on some German Woodcuts.
4. Policeman and Artist
5. Feng Shui and Contemporary Form.
6. Relativism and Picasso's Latest Work.
7. The New Egos
8. Orchestra of Media
9. The Melodrama of Modernity.
10. Exploitation of Vulgarity. ...
11. The Improvement of Life. ...
12. .Our VoTtex
Frederick Spencer Gore, by Wyndham Lewis
To Suffragettes
Vortex, Pound
Voites, Gaudier Brzeska.
...
11
30
11
...
30
...
45
...
51
87
98
adswoi
rih. 119
... 129
... 132
... 136
... 137
... 13S
... 139
... 141
... 142
... 143
... 145
146
... 147
... 156
... 151
...
... 153
... 156
ILLUSTRATIONS.
By EDWARD WADSWORTH—
NewcastIe*on-Tyne (Woodcut)
29
Cape o! Good Hope
i.
A Short Flight
... it.
March
ia.
Radiation
Iv.
By WYNDHAM LEWIS—
Plan ol War
... T«»
Timon of Athens
V.
Slow Attack
vi.
Decoration for the Countess of Droghead's
House vH.
Portrait of an Englishwoman
... viii.
Enemy of the Stars
Vih\z.
By FREDERICK ETCHELLS—
Head
* * * * + 4 * i 4 * . ]&>
Head
* * * ■ * * * * * * * dl
Patchopolis
xi.
Dieppe
xii.
By W, ROBERTS—
Dancers
, xiii.
Religion
* * * » * * . • . * . *■¥ *
By JACOB EPSTEIN—
Drawing
XT.
Drawing
** + . * . * t + J&V1*
By GAUDIER BRZESKA—
ftlsfiS * * * * * • * » • * • ■
xvil.
By CUTHBERT HAMILTON—
Group ... ... ... • ■* ... •■• ... ... xviii.
By SPENCER GORE—
Brighton Pier six.
Jttchmond Houses ... ... ... xau
Long Live the Vortex!
Long lire the great art vortex sprung up la the centre of this town 1
We stand for the Reality of the Present— not for the sentimental Future, or the
sacripant Past.
We want to leave Nature and Men alone,
We do not want to make people wear Futurist Patches, or fuss men to take to
pink and sky* blue trousers.
We are not their wives or tailors.
The only way Humanity can help artists is to remain independent and work
unconsciously.
WE NEED THE UNCONSCIOUSNESS OF HUMANITY— their
stupidity, animalism and dreams.
We believe in no perfectibility except our own,
Intrinsic beauty is in the Interpreter and Seer, not in the object or content.
We do not want to change the appearance of the world, because we are not
Naturalists, Impressionists or Futurists (the latest form of Impressionism), and do
not depend on the appearance of the world for our art.
WE ONLY WANT THE WORLD TO LIVE, and to feel it's crude
energy flowing through us.
It may be said that great artists in England are always revolutionary, Just as
in France any really fine artist had a strong traditional vein.
Blast sets out to be an avenue for all those vivid and violent ideas that could
reach the Public in no other way.
Blast will be popular, essentially. It will not appeal to any particular class,
but to the fundamental and popular instincts in every class and description of people,
TO THE INDIVIDUAL. Tfte moment a man feeh or realizes himself as an
artist, he ceases to belong to any milieu or time. Blast is created for this timeless,
fundamental Artist that exists in everybody.
The Man in the Street and the Gentleman are equally ignored.
Popular art does not mean the art of the poor people, as it is usually supposed
to. It means the art of the individuals.
Education (art education and general education) tends to destroy the creative
instinct. Therefore It is in times when education has been non=existant that art
chiefly flourished.
But it is nothing to do with " the People."
It is a mere accident that that is the most favourable time for the individual to
appear.
To make the rich of the community shed their education skin, to destroy polite-
ness, standardization and academic, that is civilized, vision, is the task we have set
ourselves,
We Want to make In England net a popular art. not a revival of lost folk art, or
a romantic fostering of siich unoctua! conditions, bat to make individuals, wherever
round.
We will convert the King if possible.
A VORTICIST KING ! WHY NOT ?
DO YOU THINK LLOYD GEORGE HAS THE VORTEX IN
HIM?
MAY WE HOPE FOR ART FROM LADY MOND ?
We are against the glorification of " the People," as we are against snobbery.
It is not necessary to be an outcast bohentian, to be unkempt or poor, any more
than it is necessary to be rich or handsome, to be an artist. Art is nothing to do with
the coat you wear. A top-hat can well bold the Sixtine. A cheap cap could hide
the image of Kephren.
AUTOMOBILISM (Marinetteism) bores us. We don't want to go about
making a hullo* bul loo about motor cars, anymore than about knives and forks,
elephants or gas -pipes.
Elephants are VERY BIG. Motor cars go quickly.
Wilde gushed twenty years ago about the beauty of machinery. Gissing, in
his romantic delight with modern lodging houses was futurist in this sense.
The futurist is a sensational and sentimental mixture of the aesthete of 189© and
the realist of 1870.
The " Poor " are detestable animals 1 They are only picturesque and amusing
for the sentimentalist or the romantic t The " Rich " are bores without a single
exception, en tant que riches /
We want those simple and great people found everywhere.
Blast presents an art of Individuals.
MANIFESTO.
BLAST First
(from politeness)
ENGLAND
CURSE ITS CLIMATE FOR ITS SINS AND INFECTIONS
DISMAL SYMBOL, SET round our bodies,
of effeminate lout within.
VICTORIAN VAMPIRE, the LONDON cloud sucks
the TOWN'S heart
A 1000 MILE LONG, 2 KILOMETER Deep
BODY OF WATER even, is pushed against us
from the Floridas, TO MAKE US MILD.
OFFICIOUS MOUNTAINS keep back DRASTIC WINDS
SO MUCH VAST MACHINERY TO PRODUCE
THE CURATE of "Eltham"
BRITANNIC /ESTHETE
WILD NATURE CRANK
DOMESTICATED
POLICEMAN
LONDON COLISEUM
SOCIALIST-PLAYWRIGHT
DALY'S MUSICAL COMEDY
0A1ETY CHORUS OWL
TONUS
CURSE
the flabby sky that can manufacture no snow, but
can only drop the sea on us in a drizzle Hke a poem
by Mr. Robert Bridges.
CURSE
tiie lazy air that cannot stiffen the back of the SERPENTINE,
or put Aquatic steel half way down the MANCHESTER CANAL
But ten years ago we saw distinctly both anew and
Ice here.
May some vulgarly inventive, but useful person, arise,
and restore to us the necessary BLIZZARDS.
LET US ONCE MORE WEAR THE ERMINE
OF THE NORTH.
WE BELIEVE in the existence of
this USEFUL LITTLE CHEMIST
IN OUR MIDST !
OH BUST FRANCE
pig plagiarism
BELLY
SLIPPERS
POODLE TEMPER
BAD MUSIC
SENTIMENTAL GALLIC GUSH
SENSATIONALISM
FUSSINESS.
PARISIAN PAROCHIALISM.
Complacent young man,
so much respect for Papa
and bis son !— Oh !— Papa
js wonderful: but all papas
are!
BLAST
APERITIFS (Pernots, Amers picon)
Bad change
Naively seductive Houri salon-
picture Cocottes
Slouching blue porters (can
carry a pantechnicon)
Stupidly rapacious people at
every step
Economy maniacs
Bouillon Kub (for being a bad
P««)
i&
PARIS. fltaMwtp Beaten of amative German
professor.
Ubiquitous linos of silly little trees.
Arcs do Trlomphe.
Imperturbable, endless prettlness.
Large empty cliques, higher up.
Bad air for the individual.
BLAST
MECCA OF THE AMERICAN
because It is not other side of Suez Canal, instead of an
afternoon's ride from London.
14
CURSE
WITH EXPLETIVE OF WHIRLWIND
THE BRITANNIC /ESTHETE
CREAM OF THE SNOBBISH EARTH
ROSE OF SHARON OF GOD-PRIG
OF SIMIAN VANITY
SNEAK AND SWOT OF THE SCHOOL-
ROOM
IMBERB (or Berbed when In Belsize)-PEDANT
PRACTICAL JOKER
DANDY
CURATE
BLAST all products of phlegmatic cold
Uh of LOOKER
CURSE
SNOBBERY
(disease of femininity)
FEAR OF RIDICULE
(arch vice of inactive, sleepy)
PLAY
STYLISM
SINS AND PLAGUES
of this LYMPHATIC finished
(we admit In every sense
finished)
VEGETABLE HUMANITY.
15
THE SPECIALIST
" PROFESSIONAL "
"GOOD WORKMAN
" GROVE-MAN "
ONE ORGAN MAN
BLAST
»i
BUST
THE
AMATEUR
SCIOLAST
ART-PIMP
JOURNALIST
SELF MAN
NO-ORGAN
16
BLAST HUMOUR
Quack ENGLISH drug for stupidity and sleepiness.
Arch enemy of REAL, conventionalizing like
gunshot, freezing supple
REAL in ferocious chemistry
of laughter.
BLAST SPORT
HUMOURS FIRST COUSIN AND ACCOMPLICE.
Impossibility for Englishman to be
grave and keep his end up,
psychologically.
Impossible for him to use Humour
as well and be persistently
grave.
Alas ! necessity for big dolls show
in front of mouth.
Visitation of Heaven on
English Miss
gums, canines of FIXED GRIN
Death's Head symbol of Anti-Life.
CURSE those who will hang over this
Manifesto with SILLY CANINES exposed.
*i
BLAST
year. 1837 to 1900
Curse abysmal inexcusable mi<idi«-eia«*
(also Aristocracy and Proletariat).
BLAST D fc
pasty shadow oast by gigantic BOGlllTl
(imagined at introduction of BOURGEOIS VICTORIAN
VISTAS).
WRING THE NECK OF all slok Inventions born In
that progressive white wake.
BLAST their weeping whiskers— hirsute
RHETORIC of EUNUCH and STYLIST-
SENTIMENTAL HYGIENICS
ROUSSEAUISMS (wild Nature cranks)
FRATERNIZING WITH MONKEYS
DIABOLICS — raptures and roses
of the erotic bookshelves
culminating In
PURGATORY OF
PUTNEY.
ia
CHAOS OF ENOCH ARDENS
laughing Jennys
Ladies with Pains
good-for-nothing Guineveres.
SNOBBISH BORROVIAN running after
GIPSY KINGS ..d ESPADAS
bowing the knee to
DAMN
wild Mother Nature,
her feminine contours,
Unimaginative insult to
MAN.
all those to-day who have taken on that Rotten Menagerie,
and still crack their whips and tumble in Piccadilly Circus,
as though London were a provincial town.
WE WHISPER IN YOOR EAR A GREAT
CCppCT
LONDON IS NOT A PROVINCIAL
TOWN.
We will allow Wonder Zoos. But we do not want the
GLOOMY VICTORIAN CIRCOS *
Piccadilly Otrous.
IT IS PICCADILLY'S CIRCUS I
ft
NOT MEANT FM MH^fiEffllS trying
out of Sixties DICKENSIAN CLOWNS,
CORELLI LADY RIDERS,
TROUPS OF PERFORMING
GIPSIES (who complain
besides that 1/6 a night
does not pay fare back to
Clapham).
so
BLAST
The Pest Office Frank Brangwyn Robertson Nicol
Rev. Pennyfeather Galloway Kyle
(Bells) (Cluster of Grapes)
Bishop of London and all his posterity
Galsworthy Dean Inge Croce Matthews
Rev- Meyer Seymour Hicks
Lionel Cast C. B. Fry Bergson Abdul Banal
Hawtrey Edward Elgar Sardlea
Filson Young Marie Corelli Geddes
Codliver Oil St. Loe Strachey Lyceum Club
Rhabindraneth Tagore Lord Glenconner of Glen
Weiniger Norman Angel Ad. Mahon
Mr. and Mrs. Dearmer Beecham Ella
A. C. Benson (PI,ls ' 0pepa ' Thomas) Sydney Webb
British Academy Messrs. Chapeil
Countess of Warwick George Edwards
Willie Ferraro Captain Cook R. J. Campbell
Chin Thesiger Martin Harvey William Archer
George Grossmith R.H.Benson
Annie Besant Chenil Clan Meyneli
Father Vaughan Joseph Holbrooke Clan Strachey
31
BLESS ENGLAND!
BLESS ENGLAND
FOB ITS SHIPS
which switchback on Blue, Green and
Red SEAS all around the PINK
EARTH-BALL,
BIG BETS ON EACH.
BLESS ALL SEAFARERS.
THEY exchange not one LAND for another, but one ELEMENT
for ANOTHER. The MORE against the LESS ABSTRACT.
BLESS the vast planetary abstraction of the UUEAfL
BLESS THE ARABS OF THE
THIS ISLAND MUST BE CONTRASTED WITH THE BLEAK 1HWES.
a*
BLESS ALL PORTS.
PORTS, RESTLESS MACHINES of
scooped out basins
heavy insect dredgers
monotonous cranes
stations
lighthouses, blazing
through the frosty
starlight, cutting the
storm like a cake
beaks of Infant boats,
side by side,
heavy chaos of
wharves,
steep walls of
factories
womanly town
BLESS these MACHINES that work the little boats across
clean liquid space, in beelines.
BLESS the great PORTS HULL
LIVERPOOL
LONDON
NEWGASTLE-ON-TYNE
BRISTOL
GLASGOW
BLESS ENGLAND,
industrial Island machine! pyramidal
workshop, its apex at Shetland, discharging itself on the sea.
BLESS
cold
magnanimous
delicate
gauche
fanciful
stupid
ENGLISHMEN
BLESS the HAIRDRESSER.
He attacks Mother Nature for a small fee.
Hourly he ploughs heads for sixpence,
Scours chins and lips for threepence.
He makes systematic mercenary war on this
WILDNESS.
He trims aimless and retrograde growths
Into GLEAN ARCHED SHAPES and
ANGULAR PLOTS.
BLESS this HESSIAN (or SILESIAN) EXPERT
correcting the grotesque anachronisms
of our physique.
as
BLESS ENGLISH HUMOUR
It Is the great barbarous weapon of
the genius among races.
The wild MOUNTAIN RAILWAY from IDEA
to IDEA, in the ancient Fair of LIFE.
BLESS UfVIl I for his solemn bleak
wisdom of laughter,
SHAKcSPkAnL for his bitter Northern
Rhetoric of humour.
BLESS ALL ENGLISH EYES
that grow crows-feet with their
FANCY and ENERGY.
BLESS this hysterical WALL built round
the EGO.
BLESS the solitude of LAUGHTER.
BLESS the separating, ungregarious
BRITISH GRIN.
26
BLESS FRANCE
for its BUSHELS of VITALITY
to the square Inch.
HOME OF MANNERS (the Best, the WORST and
Interesting mixtures).
MASTERLY PORNOGRAPHY (great enemy of progress),
GOMBATIVENESS
GREAT HUMAN SCEPTICS
DEPTHS OF ELEGANCE
FEMALE QUALITIES
FEMALES
BALLADS of its PREHISTORIC APACHE
Superb hardness and hardiesse of its
Voyou type, rebellious adolescent.
Modesty and humanity of many there.
GREAT FLOOD OF LIFE pouring out
of wound of 1797-
Also bitterer stream from 1870.
STAYING POWER, like a cat.
27
DLCww
Bridget Berrwolf Bearllne Cranmer Byng
Frieder Graham The Pope Maria de Toitiaso
Captain Kemp Munroe Gaby Jenkins
R. B. Guningham Grahame Barker
(not his brother) (John and Granville)
Mrs. Wil Finnimore Madame Strindberg Carson
Salvation Army Lord Howard de Walden
Capt. Craig Charlotte Corday Cromwell
Mrs. Duval Mary Robertson Lillie Lenton
Frank Rutter Castor Oil James Joyce
Leveridge Lydia Yavorska Preb. Carlyle Jenny
Mon. le compte de Gabulis Smithers Dick Burge
33 Church Street Sievier Gertie Millar
Norman Wallis Miss Fowler Sir Joseph Lyons
Martin Wolff Watt Mrs. Hepburn
Alfree Tommy Captain Kendell Young Ahearn
Wilfred Walter Kate Lechmere Henry Newbolt
Lady Aberconway Frank Harris Hamel
Gilbert Canaan Sir James Mathew Barry
Mrs. Belloc Lowdnes W. L. George Rayner
George Robey George Mozart Harry Weldon
Chaliapine George Hirst Graham White
Bucks Salmet Shirley Kellogg Bandsman Rice
Petty Officer Curran Applegarth Konody
Colin Bell Lewis Hind LEFRANC
Hubert Commercial Process Co.
38
Newcastle.
Edward Wadswortb.
m
MANIFESTO.
I.
i] Beyond Action and Reaction we would establish
ourselves.
2] We start from opposite statements of a chosen
world. Set up violent structure of adolescent
clearness between two extremes.
3 We discharge ourselves on both sides.
[4] We fight first on one side, then on the other,
but always for the SAME cause, which Is
neither side or both sides and ours.
[5] Mercenaries were always the best troops.
[ej We are Primitive Mercenaries In the Modern
World.
so
g] Our Causa Is NO-MAN'S.
[g We set Humour at Humour's throat
Stir up Civil War among peaceful apes.
q\ We only want Humour if it has fought like
Tragedy.
10
We only want Tragedy if it can clench its side-
muscles like hands on it's belly, and bring to
the surface a laugh like a bomb.
si
n.
±\ We hear from America and the Continent all
sorts of disagreeable things about England:
"the unmusical, anti artistic, unphilosophic
country.
2 We quite agree.
Luxury, sport, the famous English "Humour," the
thrilling ascendancy and idee fixe of Class,
producing the most intense snobbery in the
World; heavy stagnant pools of Saxon blood,
incapable of anything but the song -of a
frog, in home-counties :— these phenomena
give England a peculiar distinction In the
wrong sense, among the nations.
4] This is why England produces such good artists
from time to time.
{5] This is also the reason why a movement towards
art and imagination could burst up here,
from this lump of compressed life, with more
force than anywhere else.
3Z
jt] To believe that it Is necessary for or conducive
to art, to "Improve" life, for Instance— make
architecture, dress, ornament, in "better
taste," is absurd.
7) The Art instinct is permanently primitive.
8] In a chaos of imperfection, discord, etc., it finds
the same stimulus as in Nature.
9J The artist of the modern movement is a savage
(in no sense an "advanced," perfected, demo-
cratic, Futurist individual of Mr. Marinetti's
limited imagination) : this enormous, jangling,
journalistic, fairy desert of modern life serves
him as Nature did more technically primitive
man.
ioj As the steppes and the rigours of the Russian
winter, when the peasant has to lie for weeks
in his hut, produces that extraordinary acuity
of feeling and intelligence we associate with
the Slav; so England is just now the jnost
favourable country for the appearance of a
great art.
M
III.
\±\ We have made it quite clear that there is nothing
Chauvinistic or picturesquely patriotic about
our contentions.
r " " ' H
But there is violent boredom with that feeble
Europeanism, abasement of the miserable
"intellectual" before anything coming from
Paris, Cosmopolitan sentimentality, which pre-
vails in so many quarters.
Just as we believe that an Art must be organic
with its Time,
So we insist that what is actual and vital for
the South, is ineffectual and unactual in the
North.
4J Fairies have disappeared from Ireland (despite
foolish attempts to revive them) and the
bull-ring languishes in Spain.
5| But mysticism on the one hand, gladiatorial
instincts, blood and asceticism on the other,
34
will be always actual, and springs of Creation
for these two peoples.
e] The English Character is based on the Sea.
[7] The particular qualities and characteristics that
the sea always engenders in men are those
that are, among the many diagnostics of our
race, the most fundamentally English.
8~| That unexpected universality as well, found in
the completest English artists, is due to this.
86
ITT.
J\ We assert that the art for these climates, then,
must be a northern flower.
And we have implied what we believe should be
the specific nature of the art destined to
grow up in this country, and models of
whose flue decorate the pages of this
magazine.
It is not a question of the characterless material
climate around us.
Were that so the complication of the Jungle,
dramatic Tropic growth, the vastness of
American trees, would not be for us.
But our industries, and the Will that determined,
face to face with its needs, the direction of
the modern world, has reared up steel trees
where the green ones were lacking; has
exploded in useful growths, and found wilder
intricacies than those of Nature.
as
[l] We bring clearly forward the following points,
before further defining the character of this
necessary native art.
2] At the freest and most vigorous period of
ENGLAND'S history, her literature, then chief
Art, was in many ways identical with that of
France.
3] Chaucer was very much cousin of Villon as an
artist.
4] Shakespeare and Montaigne formed one litera-
ture.
5] But Shakespeare reflected in his imagination a
mysticism, madness and delicacy peculiar to
the North, and brought equal quantities of
Comic and Tragic together.
6
Humour is a phenomenon caused by sudden
pouring of culture into Barbary.
37
t! It is intelligence electrified by flood of Naivety.
8
9
It is Chaos invading Concept and bursting it like
nitrogen.
It is the Individual masquerading as Humanity like
a child in clothes too big for him.
Jo] Tragic Humour is the birthright of the North.
ll| Any great Northern Art will partake of this
insidious and volcanic chaos.
J2] No great ENGLISH Art need be ashamed to share
some glory with France, to-morrow it may be
with Germany, where the Elizabethans did
before it.
Jay But it will never be French, any more than
Shakespeare was, the most catholic and subtle
Englishman.
88
¥1.
l] The Modern World is due almost entirely to
Anglo-Saxon genius,— its appearance and its
spirit.
2] Machinery, trains, steam-ships, all that dis-
tinguishes externally our time, came far more
from here than anywhere else.
In dress, manners, mechanical inventions, LIFE,
that is, ENGLAND, has influenced Europe in
the same way that France has in Art.
4] But busy with this LIFE-EFFORT, she has been
the last to become conscious of the Art that
is an organism of this new Order and Will
of Man.
"5] Machinery is the greatest Earth-medium: inci-
dentally it sweeps away the doctrines of a
narrow and pedantic Realism at one stroke.
[6J By mechanical inventiveness, too, just as English-
men have spread themselves all over the
89
Earth, they have brought all the hemispheres
about them in their original island.
J] It cannot be said that the complication of the
Jungle, dramatic tropic growths, the vastness
of American trees, is not for us.
8J For, in the forms of machinery, Factories, new
and vaster buildings, bridges and works, we
have all that, naturally, around us.
w
vn.
\±\ Once this consciousness towards the new possi-
bilities of expression in present life has come,
however, it will be more the legitimate property
of Englishmen than of any other people in
Europe.
2J It should also, as it is by origin theirs, inspire
them more forcibly and directly.
3 They are the inventors of this bareness and
hardness, and should be the great enemies of
Romance.
"g The Romance peoples will always be, at bottom,
its defenders.
The Latins are at present, for instance, in their
"discovery" of sport, their Futuristic gush
over machines, aeroplanes, etc., the most
romantic and sentimental "moderns" to be
found.
6] It Is only the second-rate people in France or Italy
who are thorough revolutionaries.
31
7J In England, on the oHier hand, there Is no
vulgarity In revolt.
8
9
Or, rather, there Is no revolt, it Is the normal
state.
So often rebels of the North and the South are
diametrically opposed species.
loj The nearest thing in England to a great traditional
French artist, is a great revolutionary English
one.
«a
Signatures for Manifesto
R. Aldington
Arbuthnot
L. Atkinson
Gaudier Brzeska
J. Dismorr
C. Hamilton
E. Pound
W. Roberts
H. Sanders
E. Wadsworth
Wyndham Lewis
43
POEMS
8V
EZRA POUND.
SALUTATION THE THIRD.
Let us deride the sinugness of *' The Times " :
GUFFAW!
So much the gagged reviewers,
It will pay them when the worms are wriggling in their vitals ;
These were they who objected to newness,
HERE are their TOMBSTONES.
They supported the gag and the ring :
A little black BOX contains them.
SO shall you be also,
You slut = bellied obstructionist,
You sworn foe to free speech and good letters,
You fungus, you continuous gangrene.
Come, let us on with the new deal,
Let us be done with Jews and Jobbery,
Let us SPIT upon those who fawn on the JEWS for their money,
Let us out to the pastures.
PERHAPS I wili die at thirty,
Perhaps you will have the pleasure of defiling my pauper's grave,
I wish you JOY, 1 proffer you ALL my assistance.
It has been your HABIT for long to do away with true poets,
You either drive them mad, or else you blink at their suicides,
Or else you condone their drugs, and talk of insanity and genius,
BUT I will not go mad to please you.
I will not FLATTER you with an early death.
OH, NO ! I will stick it out,
I will feel your hates wriggling about my feet,
And I will laugh at you and mock you,
And I will offer you consolations in irony,
O fools, detesters of Beauty.
I have seen many who go about with supplications,
Afraid to say how they hate you.
HERE is the taste of my BOOT,
CARESS it, lick off the BLACKING.
45
MONUMENTUM AERE, EtS.
You say that I take a good deal upon myself;
Thai I strut to tfare robes of asBsmptfca.
In a few years no one will remember the t; buffo,"
No one will remember the trival parts of me,
The comic detail will not be present.
As for you, you will lie in the earth,
And it is doubtful if even your manure will be rich enough
To beep grass
Over your grave
COME MY CANTILATIONS.
Come my cantilations,
Let us damp our hatreds into one bunch and be done with them,
Hot son, clear water, fresh wind,
Let me be free of pavements,
Let me be free of the printers.
Let come beautiful people
Wearing raw silk of good coloar,
Let come the graceful speakers,
Let come the ready of wit,
Let come the gay of manner, the insolent and the exulting.
We speak ol burnished lakes,
And of dry air, as clear as metal.
4$
BEFORE SLEEP.
The lateral vibrations caress me,
They leap and caress me,
They work pathetically in my favour,
They seek my financial good.
She of the spear, stands present.
The gods of the underworld attend me, Annuls.
To these are they of thy company.
With a pathetic solicitude, they attend me.
Undulent*
Their realm is the lateral courses.
11,
Light 1
I am up to follow thee, Pallas.
Up 4nd out of their caresses.
You were gone up as rocket,
Bending your passages from right to left and from left to right
In the flat projection of a spiral.
The gods of drugged sleep attenti me,
Wishing me well.
I am up to follow thee, Pallas.
4?
HIS VISION OF A CERTAIN LADY
POST MORTEM.
A brown, fat babe sitting in the lotus,
And you were glad and laughing,
With a laughter not ©i this world.
It is good to splash in the water
And laughter is the end oi all things.
EPITAPHS.
FU I*
" Fu I loved the green hills and the white clouds,
Alas, he died of drink/'
LI PO.
And Li Po also died drunk.
He tried to embrace a moon
In the yellow river,
FRATRES MINORES.
Certain poets here and in France
Still sigh over established and natural fact
Long since fully discussed by Ovid.
They howl. They complain in delicate and exhausted metres
*£b ! was bori hi 551 A.D. and died in 63ft. This it Us epHtgfe very macs u be wrote it.
48
A Short Flight.
Edward Wads worth.
March.
Edward Wadsworth.
'/J
"3
■3
WOMEN BEFORE A SHOP.
The gew=gaws of false amber and false turquoise attract them.
" Like to like nature." These agglutinous yellows !
L'ART.
Ureen arsenic smeared on an eggwhite cloth,
Crushed strawberries ! Come let us (east our eyes.
THE NEW CAKE OF SOAP.
Lo, how it gleams and glistens in the sun
Like the cheek of a Chesterton.
MEDITATIO.
When I carefully consider the curious habits of dogs,
I am compelled to admit
That man is the superior animal.
When I consider the curious habits of man,
I confess, my friend, I am puzzled.
«
PASTORAL.
The Greenest Growth of Maytime. , '—A.c.s.
The young lady opposite
Has such beautiful hands
That I sit enchanted
While she combs her hair in decollete.
I have no shame whatever
In watching the performance,
The bareness of her delicate
Hands and fingers does not
In the least embarrass me,
BUT Ood forbid that I should gain further acquaintance,
For her laugMer frightens even the street hawker
And the alley cat dies ol a migraine.
$0
ENEMY OF IE STARS,
ENEMY OF THE STARS
Synopsis in PROGRAMME.
ADVERTISEMENT
THE SCENE,
CHARACTERS,
I SOME BLEAK CIRCUS, UNCOVERED,
CAREFULLY-CHOSEN, VIVID NIGHT.
IT IS PACKED WITH POSTERITY,
SILENT AND EXPECTANT.
POSTERITY IS SILENT, LIKE THE
DEAD, AND MORE PATHETIC.
TWO HEATHEN CLOWNS, GRAVE BOOTH ANIMALS
CYNICAL ATHLETES.
DRESS.
ENORMOUS YOUNGSTERS, BURSTING EVERY-
WHERE THROUGH HEAVY TIGHT CLOTHES,
LABOURED IN BY DULL EXPLOSIVE MUSCLES,
full of fiery dust and sinewy energetic air,
not sap. BLACK CLOTH CUT SOMEWHERE,
NOWADAYS, ON THE UPPER BALTIC.
VERY WELL ACTED BY YOU AND ME.
65
Plan of War.
Wvndham Lewis,
Vl7
Timon of Athens.
Wvndham Lewis.
Slow Attack,
Wvndham Lewis.
Decoration for the Countess
of Drogheda's Mouse.
Wvitdham Lewis.
Portrait of an Englishwoman.
Wvndham Lewis.
f- -'
■•'••■■' ■ '•-••• ■ -f ■ ■■ ■ ■ - ■ ■■■.■.,■,..■ .j'
iv£±v>a
The Enemv of the Stars.
Wvndham Lewis,
THE PLAY.
ENEMY OF THE STARS.
ONE IS IN IMMENSE COLLAPSE OF CHRONIC PHILOSOPHY.
YET HE BULGES ALL OVER, COMPLEX FRUIT, WITH SIMPLE
FIRE OF LIFE. GREAT MASK, VENUSTIC AND VERIDIC, TYPE
OF FEMININE BEAUTY CALLED " MANISH."
FIRST HE IS ALONE. A HUMAN BULL RUSHES INTO THE
CIRCUS. THIS SUPER IS NO MORE IMPORTANT THAN LOUNG-
ING STAR OVERHEAD. HE IS NOT EVEN A "STAR." HE
RUSHES OFF, INTO THE EARTH.
CHARACTERS AND PROPERTIES BOTH EMERGE FROM
GANGWAY INTO GROUND AT ONE SIDE.
THEN AGAIN THE PROTAGONIST REMAINS NEGLECTED,
AS THOUGH HIS TWO FELLOW ACTORS HAD FORGOTTEN
HIM, CAROUSING IN THEIR PROFESSIONAL CAVERN.
SECOND CHARACTER, APPALLING "GAMIN," BLACK
BOURGEOIS ASPIRATIONS UNDERMINGING BLATANT VIRTU-
OSITY OF SELF.
His criminal instinct of intemperate bilious heart, put at service of unknown
Humanity, our King, to express its violent royal aversion to Protagonist, statne=
mirage of Liberty in the great desert.
Mask of discontent, anxious to explode, restrained by qualms of vanity, and
professional coyness. Eyes grown venturesome in native temperatures of Pole —
indulgent and familiar, blessing with white nights.
Type of characters takens from broad faces where Europe grows arctic,
intense, human and universal.
*' Yet you and me : why not from the English metropolis? " — Listen: it is
our honeymoon. We go abroad for first scene of our drama. Such a strange thing
as our coming together requires a strange place for initial stages o! our intimate
ceremonious acquaintance.
59
THERE ARE TWO SCENES.
STAGE ARRANGEMENTS.
RED OF STAINED COPPER PREDOMINANT COLOUR.
OVERTURNED CASES AND OTHER IMPEDIMENTA HAVE
BEEN COVERED, THROUGHOUT ARENA, WITH OLD SAIL-
CANVAS.
HUT OF SECOND SCENE IS SUGGESTED BY CHARACTERS
TAKING UP THEIR POSITION AT OPENING OF SHAFT
LEADING DOWN INTO MINES QUARTERS.
A GUST, SUCH AS IS MET IN THE CORRIDORS OF THE
TUBE, MAKES THEIR CLOTHES SHIVER OR FLAP, AND
BLARES UP THEIR VOICES. MASKS FITTED WITH TRUMPETS
OF ANTIQUE THEATRE, WITH EFFECT OF TWO CHILDREN
BLOWING AT EACH OTHER WITH TIN TRUMPETS.
AUDIENCE LOOKS DOWN INTO SCENE, AS THOUGH IT
WERE A HUT ROLLED HALF ON ITS BACK, DOOR UPWARDS,
CHARACTERS GIDDILY MOUNTING IN ITS OPENING.
60
ARGOL
INVESTMENT OF RED UNIVERSE.
EACH FORCE ATTEMPTS TO SHAKE HIM.
CENTRAL AS STONE. POISED MAGNET OF SUBTLE,
VAST, SELFISH THINGS.
HE LIES LIKE HUMAN STRATA OF INFERNAL BIOLOGIES.
WALKS LIKE WARY SHIFTING OF BODIES IN DISTANT
EQUIPOISE. SITS LIKE A GOD BUILT BY AN ARCHITECTURAL
STREAM, FECUNDED BY MAD BLASTS SUNLIGHT.
The Orst stars appear and Argol comes out of the hut. This is his cue. The
stars are his cast. He is rather late and snips into it's place a test button.
A noise falls on the cream of Posterity, assembled in silent banks. One hears the
gnats' song of the Thirtieth centuries.
They strain to see him, a gladiator who has come to Sight a ghost, Humanity —
the great Sport of Future Mankind,
He is the prime athlete exponent of this sport in it's palmy days. Posterity
slowly sinks into the hypnotic trance of Art, and the Arena is transformed into the
necessary scene.
THE RED WALLS OF THE UNIVERSE NOW SHUT THEM
IN, WITH THIS CONDEMNED PROTAGONIST.
THEY BREATHE IN CLOSE ATMOSPHERE OF TERROR
AND NECESSITY TILL THE EXECUTION IS OVER, THE RED
WALLS RECEDE, THE UNIVERSE SATISFIED.
THE BOX OFFICE RECEIPTS HAVE BEEN ENORMOUS.
THE ACTION OPENS.
61
THE YARD.
The Earth has burst, a granite flower, and disclosed the scene.
A wheelwright's yard.
Full of dry, white volcanic light.
Full of emblems ol one trade: stacks of pine, iron, wheels stranded.
Rough Eden of one soul, to whom another man, and not EVE, would be
mated.
A canal at one side, the night pouring into U like blood from a butcher's pail.
Rouge mash in alluminum mirror, sunset's grimace through the night.
A leaden gob, slipped at zenith, first drop of violent night, spreads
cataclysmically in harsh water ol coming, Caustic Reckett's stain.
Three trees, above canal, sentimental, black and conventional in number, drive
lea! flocks, with jeering cry.
Or they slightly bend their joints, impassible acrobats ; step rapidly forward,
faintly incline their heads.
Across the mud in pod of the canal their shadows are gauky toy crocodiles,
sawed up and down by infant giant?
Gollywog of Arabian synnffrtty several fons> Arghol drags flfeni fit blank
nervous tottret,
ea
THE SUPER.
Arghol crosses yard to the banks of the canal : sits down.
" Arghol ! "
** I am here."
His voice raucous and disfigured with a catarrh of lies in the fetid bankrupt
atmosphere of lifers swamp : clear and splendid among Truth's balsamic hills,
shepherding his agile thoughts.
'* Arghol I"
It was like a child's voice hunting it's mother.
A note of primitive distress edged the thick bellow. The figure rushed without
running. Arghol heeled over to the left. A boot battered his right hand
ribs. These were the least damaged : it was their turn.
Upper lip shot down, half covering chin, his body reached methodically. At
each blow, in muscular spasm, he made the pain pass out. Roiled and jumped,
crouched and flung his grovelling Enceladus weight against it, like swimmer with
wave.
The boot, and heavy shadow above it, went. The self = centred and elemental
shadow, with whistling noise peculiar to it, passed softly and sickly into a doorway's
brown light.
The second attack* pain left by first shadow, lashing him, was worse. He
lost consciousness.
63
THE NIGHT.
His eyes woke first, shaken by rough moonbeams. A white, crude volume of
brutal light blazed over him. Immense bleak electric advertisement of God, it
crushed with wild emptiness of street.
The ice field of the sky swept and crashed silently. Blowing wild organism
into the hard splendid clouds, some will cast it's glare, as well, over him.
The canal ran in one direction, his blood, weakly, in the opposite.
The stars shone madly in the archaic blank wilderness of the universe, machines
of prey.
Mastodons, placid in electric atmosphere, white rivers of power. They stood
in eternal black sunlight.
Tigers are beautiful imperfect brutes.
Throats iron eternities, drinking heavy radiance, limbs towers of blatant light,
the stars poised, immensely distant, with their metal sides, pantheistic machines.
The farther, the more violent and vivid, Nature : weakness crushed out of
creation ! Hard weakness, a flea's size, pinched to death in a second, could it
get so far.
He rose before this cliff of cadaverous beaming force, imprisoned in a messed
socket of existence,
Will Energy some day reach Earth like violent civilisation, smashing or
hardening all? In his mind a chip of distant hardness, tugged at dully like a tooth,
made him ache from top to toe.
But the violences of all things had left him so far intact.
64
HAN P.
i.
Hanp comes out of hut, coughing like a goat, rolling a cigarette. He goes
it© where Arghol is lying. He stirs him with his foot roughly.
Arghol strains and stretches elegantly, face over shoulder, like a woman.
" Come, you fool, and have supper." Hanp walks back to hut, leaving him.
Arghol lies, hands clasped round his knees. This new kick has put him into
a childish lethargy. He gets to his feet soon, and walks to hut. He puts his
hand on Hanp's shoulder, who has been watching him, and kisses him on the cheek.
Hanp shakes him off with fury and passes inside hut.
Bastard violence of his half disciple, metis of an apache of the icy steppe, sleek
citizen, and his own dumbfounding soul.
Fungi of sullen violet thoughts, investing primitive vegetation. Hot words
drummed on his ear every evening : abuse : question. Groping hands strummed
toppling Byzantine organ of his mind, producing monotonous black fugue.
Harsh bayadere=shepherdess of Pamir, with her Chinese beauty : living on
from month to month in utmost tent with wastrel, lean as mandrake root, red and
precocious : with heavy black odour of vast Manchuria n garden — deserts, and the
disreputable muddy gold squandered by the unknown sun of the Amur.
His mind unlocked, free to this violent hand. It was his mind's one cold
flirtation, then cold love. Excelling in beauty, marked out for Hindu fate of
sovereign prostitution, but clear of the world, with furious vow not to return. The
deep female strain succumbed to this ragged spirt of crude manhood, masculine
with blunt wilfulness and hideous stupidity of the fecund horde of men, phalic wand-
like cataract incessantly poured into God. This pip of icy spray struck him on
the mouth. He tasted it with new pleasure, before spitting it out : acrid.
To be spat back among men. The young men foresaw the event.
They ate their supper at the door of the hut. An hour passed in wandering
spacious silence.
" Was it bad to uight? " a fierce and railing question often repeated.
Arghol lay silent, his hands a thick shell fitting back of head, bis face grej
vegetable cave.
65
" Can't you kill him, in the name of God? A man has his hands, little else.
Mote and speck, the universe illimitable! *» Hanp gibed. " It is true he is a speck,
but all men are. To you he is immense."
They sat, two grubby shadows, unvaccinated as yet by the moon's lymph,
sickened by the immense vague infections of night.
" That is absurd. I have explained to you. Here I get routine, the will of
the universe manifested with directness and persistence. Figures of persecution are
accidents or adventures for some. Prick the thin near heart, like a pea, and the
bubble puffs out. That would not be of the faintest use in my case."
Two small black Barnes, wavering, as their tongues moved, drumming out
thought, with low earth draughts and hard sudden winds dropped like slapping
birds from climaxes in the clouds.
No Morris-lens would have dragged them from the key of vastness. They
must be severe midgets, brain specks of the vertiginous, seismic vertebrae, slowly-
living lines, of landscape.
" Self, sacred act of violence, is like murder on my face and hands. The stain
won't come out. It is the one piece of property all communities have agreed it is
illegal to possess. The sweetesttempered person, once he discovers you are that
sort of criminal, changes any opinion of you, and is on his guard. When mankind
cannot overcome a personality, it has an immemorial way out of the difficulty. It
becomes it. It imitates and assimlates that Ego until it is no longer one.. ..This is
success.
Between Personality and Mankind it is always a question of dog and cat ; they
are diametrically opposed species. Self is the ancient race, the rest are the new
one. Self is the race that lost. But Mankind still suspects Egotistic plots, and
hunts Pretenders.
My uncle is very little of a relation. It would be foolish to kill him. He is
an echantillon, acid advertisement slipped in letter- bos : space's store-rooms dense
with frivolous originals. I am used to him, as well/
*»
Arghol's voice had no modulations of argument. Weak now, it handled words
numbly, like tired compositor. His body was quite strong again and vivacious.
Words acted on it as rain on a plant. It got a stormy neat brilliance in this soft
shower. One flame balanced giddily erect, while other larger one swerved and sang
with speech coldly before it.
They lay in a pool of bleak brown shadow, disturbed once by a rats plunging
head. It seemed to rattle along, yet slide on oiled planes. Arghol shifted his
legs mechanically. It was a hutch with low loft where they slept.
Beyond the canal, brute = lands, shuttered with stoney clouds, lay in heavy angels
of sand. They were squirted in by twenty ragged streams ; legions of quails hopped
parasiticaliy In the miniature cliffs.
ea
Argbol's uncle was a wheelwright on the edge of the town.
Two hundred miles to north the Arctic circle swept. Sinister tramps, it's winds
came wandering down the high road, fatigued and chill, doors shut against them.
" First of all ; lily pollen of Ideal on red badge of your predatory category.
Scrape this oft and you lose your appetite. Obviously. — But I don't want in any
case to eat Smith, because he is tough and distasteful to me. I am too vain to do
harm, too superb ever to lift a finger when harmed.
A man eats his mutton chop, forgetting it is his neighbour ; drinks every evening
blood of the Christs, and gossips of glory.
Existence ; loud feeble sunset, blaring like lumpish, savage clown, alive with
rigid tinsel, before a misty door : announcing events, tricks and a thousand follies,
to penniless herds, their eyes red with stupidity.
To leave violently slow monotonous life is to take header into the boiling starry
cold. {For with me some guilty fire of friction unspent in solitariness, will reach
the stars.)
Hell of those Heavens uncovered, whirling pit, every evening ! You cling to
any object, dig your nails in earth, not to drop into it."
The night plunged gleaming nervous arms down into the wood, to wrench it
up by the roots. Restless and rythimical, beyond the staring red rimmed doorway,
giddy and expanding in drunken walls, its heavy drastic lights shifted.
Arghol could see only ponderous arabesques of red cloud, whose lines did not
stop at door's frame, but pressed on into shadows within the hut, in tyrannous con*
tinuity. As a cloud drove eastward, out of this frame, its weight passed, with
spiritual menace, into the hut. A thunderous atmosphere thickened above their
heads.
Arghol, paler, tossed clumsily and swiftly from side to side, as though asleep.
He got nearer the door. The clouds had room to waste themselves. The land
continued in dull form, one per cent, animal, these immense bird*amoebas. Nerves
made the earth pulse up against his side and reverberate. He dragged hot palms
along the ground, caressing its explosive harshness.
AH merely exterior attach.
His face calm seismograph of eruptions in Heaven.
Head of black, eagerly carved, herculean Venus, of iron tribe, hyper barbarous
and ascetic. Lofty tents, sonorous with October rains, swarming from vast bright
doIMike Asiatic lakes.
Faces following stars in blue rivers, till sea^struck, thundering engine of red
water.
Ptak Idle brotherhood of little stars, passed over by rough cloud of sea.
67
Cataclysm of premature decadence.
Extermination of the resounding, sombre, summer tents in a decade, furious
mass of images left : no human.
Immense production of barren muscular girl idols, wood verdigris, copper, dull
paints, flowers.
Hundred idols to a man, and a race swamped in hurricane of art, falling on big
narrow souls of its artists.
Head heavy and bird=like, weighted to strike, living on his body, ungainly red
Atlantic wave.
'* To have read all the books of the town, Arghol, and to come back here to
take up this lifeagain."
Coaxing : genuine stupefaction : reproach, a trap.
Arghol once more preceded him through his soul, unbenevolent. Doors opened
on noisy biankness, coming through from calm, reeling noon*loudness beyond.
Garrets waking like faces. A shout down a passage to show it's depth, horizon as
well. Voice coming back with suddenness of expert pugilistics.
Perpetual inspector of himself.
" I must live, like a tree, where I grow. An inch to left or right would be
too much.
In the town I felt unrighteous in escaping blows, home anger, destiny of here.
Selfishness, flouting of destiny, to step so much as an inch out of the bull's
eye of your birth. (When it is obviously a bull's eye !)
A visionary tree, not migratory : visions from within.
A man with headache lies in deliberate leaden inanimation. He isolates his
body, floods it with phlegm, sucks numbness up to his brain.
A soul wettest dough, doughest lead: a bullet. To drop down Eternity like
a plummet.
Accumulate in myself, day after day, dense concentration of pig life. Nothing
spent, stored rather in strong stagnation, till rid at last of evaporation and lightness
characteristic of men. So burst Death's membrane through, slog beyond, not float
in appalling distances.
Energy has been fixed on me from nowhere — heavy and astonished : resigned.
Or is it for remote sin ! I will use it, anyway, as prisoner his bowl or sheet for
escape : not as means of idle humiliation.
One night Death left his card. I was not familiar with the name he ehose : bat
the black edge was deep. I flung it back. A thousand awakenings of violence.
as
Next day I had my knife ap my sleeve as my uncle came at me, ready for what
you recommend. But a superstition, habit, is there, curbing him mathematically :
that of not killing me. I should know an ounce of effort more. — He loads my plate,
even. He must have palpable reasons for my being alive.*'
A superb urchin watching some centre of angry commotion in the street, his
companion kept his puffed slit eyes, generously cruel, fixed on him. God and Fate,
constant protagonists, one equivalent to Police, his simple sensationalism was always
focussed on. But God was really his champion. He longed to see God fall on
Arghol, and wipe the earth with him. He egged God on : then egged on Arghol.
His soft rigid face grinned with intensity of attention, propped contemplatively on
hand.
Port — prowler, serf of the capital, serving it's tongue and gait within the grasp
and aroma of the white, mat, immense sea. Abstract instinct of sullen seafarer,
dry-salted in slow acrid airs, aertan flood not stopped by shore, dying in dirty warmth
of harbour* boulevards.
His soul like oceantown ; leant on by two skies. Lower opaque one washes
it with noisy clouds : or lies giddily flush with street crevices, wedges of black air,
flooding it with red emptiness of dead light.
It sends ships between its unchanging slight rock of houses periodically, slowly
to spacious centre. Nineteen big ships, like nineteen nomad souls for its
amphibious sluggish body, locked there.
69
II.
" What Is destiny? Why yours to stay here, more than to live in the town or
cross to America?"
" My dear Hanp, your geography is so up=to*date !
Geography doesn't interest me. America is geography.
I've explained to you what the town is like.
Offences against the discipline of the universe are registered by a sort of
conscience, prior to the kicks, Blows rain on me. Mine is not a popular post. It
is my destiny right enough : an extremely unpleasant one,' 1
M It is not the destiny of a man like you to live buried in this cursed hole."
" Our soul is wild, with primitiveness of it's own. It's wilderness is anywhere
— in a shop, sailing, reading psalms : it's greatest good our destiny.
Anything I possess is drunk up here on the world's brink, by big stars, and
returned me in the shape of thought heavy as a mateorite. The stone of the stars
will do for my seal and emblem. I practise with it, monotonous *' putting," that
I may hit Death when he comes."
" Your thought is buried in yourself."
" A thought weighs less in a million brains than in one. No one is conjuror
enough to prevent spilling. Rather the bastard form infects the original. Famous
men are those who have exchanged themselves against a thousand idiots. When you
hear a famous man has died penniless and deseased, you say, " Well served."
Fart of life's arrangement is that the few best become these cheap scarecrows.
The process and condition of life, without any exception, is a grotesque
degradation, and "souillure" of the original solitude of the soul. There is no
help for it, since each gesture and word partakes of it, and the child has already
covered himself with mire.
Anything but yourself is dirt. Anybody that is. I do not feel clean enough
to die, or to make it worth while killing myself."
A laugh, packed with hatred, not hoping to carry, snapped like a Sddle^cord.
" Sour grapes I That's what it's all about ! And you let yourself be kicked
to death here out of spite,
Why do you talk to me, I should like to know? Answer me that? "
70
Disrespect or mocking is followed, in spiritualistic seances, with offended
silence on part of the spooks. Such silence, not discernedly offended, now followed.
The pseudo-rustic Master, cavernously, hemicycally real, but anomalous sham'
ness on him in these circumstances, poudre de riz on face of knights sleeping effigy,
lay back indifferent, his feet lying, two heavy closed books, before the disciple.
Arghol was a large open book, full of truths and insults.
He opened his jaws wide once more in egotistic self castfgation.
" The doctoring is often fouler than disease.
Men have a loathsome deformity called Self ; affliction got through
indiscriminate rubbing against their fellows : Social excrescence.
Their being is regulated by exigencies of this affliction. Only one operation
can cure it : the suicide's knife.
Or an immense snuffling or taciturn parasite, become necessary to victim, like
abortive poodle, all nerves, vice and dissatisfaction.
I have smashed it against me, but it still writhes, turbulent mess.
I have shrunk it in frosty climates, but it has filtered filth inward through me,
dispersed till my deepest solitude is impure.
Mire stirred up desperately, without success in subsequent hygiene. 1 '
This focussed disciples' physical repulsion : nausea of humility added. Perfect
tyrannic contempt: but choking respect, curiosity; consciousness of defeat. These
two extremes clashed furiously. The contempt claimed it's security and triumph :
the other sentiment baffled it. His hatred of Arghol for perpetually producing tbis
second sentiment grew. This would have been faint without physical repulsion to
fascinate him, make his murderous and sick.
He was strong and insolent with consciousness stuffed in him in anonymous
form of vastness of Humanity: full of rage at gigantic insolence and superiority,
combined with utter uncleanness and despicableness— all back to physical parallel—
of his Master.
The more Arghol made him realize his congenital fatuity and cheapness, the
more a contemptible matter appeared accumulated in the image of his Master,
sunken mirror. The price of this sharp vision of mastery was contamination.
Too many things inhabited together in tbis spirit for cleanliness or health. Is
one soul too narrow an abode for genius?
To have humanity inside you — to keep a doss-house ! At ieast impossible to
organise on such a scale.
People are right who would disperse these impure monopolies I Let everyone
get his little bit, intellectual Ballam rather than Bedlam I
III.
In sluggish but resolute progress towards the City and centre, on part o! young
man was to be found cause of Arghol's ascendency in first place. Arghol had
returned some months only from the great city of their world.
He showed Hanp picture postcards. He described the character of each scene.
Then he had begun describing more closely. At length, systematically he lived
again there for his questioner, exhausted the capital, put it completely in his hands.
The young man had got there without going there. But instead of satisfying him,
this developed a wild desire to start off at once. Then Arghol said : —
" Wait a moment."
He whispered something in his ear.
" Is that true? "
'* Aye and more."
He supplemented his description with a whole life of comment and disillusion. —
iThe youug man felt now tbat he had left the city. His life was being lived for
him. — But he forgot this and fought for his first city. Then he began taking a
pleasure in destruction.
He had got under Arghol's touch.
But when he came to look squarely at his new possession, which he had
exchanged for his city, he found it wild, incredibly sad, hateful stuff.
Somehow, however, the City had settled down in Arghol. He must seek it
there, and rescue it from that tyrannic abode, — He could not now start off without
taking this unreal image city with him. He sat down to invest it, Arghol its walls.
72
Argaol had fallen. His Th6baide had been ais Waterloo.
He now sat up slowly.
** Why do I speak to you? "
It's not to yon but myself. — I think it's a physical matter : simply to use one's
mouth.
My thoughts to walk abroad and not always be stuffed up in my head : ideas
to banjo this resounding body.
You seemed such a contemptible sort of fellow that there was some hope for
you. Or to be clear, there was NOTHING to hope from your vile character.
That is better than little painful somethings !
I am amazed to find that you are like me.
I talk to you for an hour and get more disgusted with myself.
I find I wanted to make a naif yapping Poodle=parasite of you. — I shall always
be a prostitute.
I wanted to make you my self ; you understand ?
Every man who wants to make another HIMSELF, is seeking a companion
for his detached ailment of a self.
You are an unclean little beast, crept gloomily out of my ego. You are the
world, brother, with its family objections to me.
Go back to our Mother and spit in her face for me !
I wish to see you no more here 1 Leave at once. Here is money* /Take train
at once : Berlin is the place for your pestilential little carcass, Get out 1
Here I tiol"
Amazement had stretched the disciple's face back like a mouth, then slowly
it contracted, the eyes growing smaller, chin more prominent, old and clenched like
a fist.
Arghol's voice rang coldly in the hut, a bell beaten by words.
Only the words, not tune of bell, had grown harder. At last they boat
virulently.
73
;Wben be had finished, silence fen 1%$ guilloifcie befayem fl&Hfc sejerlttg bondjt.
The disciple spoke with his own voice, which he had not used for some weeks.
It sounded fresh, brisk and strange to him, half live garish salt Ash.
His mouth felt different.
** Is that all? "
Arghol was relieved at sound of Hanp's voice, no longer borrowed,
and felt better disposed towards him. The strain of this mock life, or real life,
rather, was tremendous on his underworld of energy and rebellious muscles. This
cold outburst was not commensurate with it. It was twitch of loud bound nerve
only.
" Bloody glib=tongued cow I You think you can treat me that way ! "
Hanp sprang out of the ground, a handful of furious movements : flung himself
on Arghol.
Once more the stars had come down.
Arghol used his fists.
To break vows and spoil continuity of instinctive behaviour, lose a prize that
would only be a trophy tankard never drunk from, is always fine.
Arghol would have flung away his hoarding and scraping of thought as well
now. But his calm, long instrument of thought, was too heavy. It weighed him
down, resisted his swift anarchist effort, and made him giddy.
His fear of death, aeiimanhood, words coming out of caverns of belief —
synthesis, that is, of ideal lite — appalled him with his own strength.
Strike his disciple as he had abused him. Suddenly give way, Incurable
self taught you a heroism.
The young man brought his own disgust back to htm. Full of disgust :
therefore disgusting. He felt himself on him. What a cause of downfall !
74
The great beer=coloured sky, at the hiss, leapt in fete of green, gaiety,
Its immense lines bent like whalebones and sprang back with slight deaf
thunder.
The shy, two clouds, their two furious shadows, fought.
The bleak misty hospital of the horizon grew pale with fluid of anger.
The trees were wiped ont in a blow.
The hut became a new boat inebriated with electric milky human passion,
poured in.
It shrank and struck them ; struck, in its course, in a stirred up unmixed world,
by tree, or house=side grown wave.
First they hit each other, both with blows about equal in force— -on face and
head.
Soul perched like aviator in basin of skull, more alert and smaller than on any
other occasion. Mask stoic with energy : thought cleaned off slick — pure and clean
with action. Bodies grown brain, black octopi.
Flushes on silk epiderm and fierce card-play of fists between : emptying of
** hand " on soft flesh-table.
Arms of grey windmills, grinding anger on stone of the new heart.
Messages from one to another, dropped down anywhere when nobody is looking,
reaching brain by telegraph ; most desolating and alarming messages possible.
The attacker rushed in drunk with blows. They rolled, swift jagged rut, into
one corner of shed : large insect scuttling roughly to hiding.
Stopped astonished.
Fisticuffs again : then rolled kicking air and each other, springs broken, torn
from engine.
Hanp's punch wore itself out, soon, on herculean clouds* at mad rudder of
boat on Arghol.
Then like a punch ball, something vague and swift struck him on face,
exhausted and white!
Arghol did not hit hard. Like something inanimate, only striking as rebound
and as attacked.
He became soft, blunt paw of Nature, taken back to her bosom, mechanically ;
slowly and idly winning.
75
He became part of responsive landscape : Us friend's active pooch key of Ak
commotion.
Hanp fell somewhere in the shadow : there lay.
Arghol stood rigid.
As the nervous geometry of the world in sight relaxed, and went on with It's
perpetual mystic invention, he threw himself down where he had heen lying before.
A strong flood of thought passed up to his fatigued head, and at once dazed him.
Not his body only, but being was out of training for action : puffed and exhilarated.
Thoughts fell on it like punches.
His mind, baying mastiff, he flung off.
In steep struggle he rolled into sleep,
Two clear thoughts had intervened between fight and sleep.
Now a dream began valuing, with it's tentative symbols, preceding events.
A black jacket and shirt hung on nails across window : a gas jet turned low
to keep room warm, through the night, sallow chill illumination : dirty pillows,
black and thin in middle, worn down by rough head, but congested at each end.
Bedclothes crawling over bed never-made, like stagast waves and eddies
to be crept beneath. — Picture above pillow of Rosa Bonheur horses ( trampling up
wall like well fed toffyish insects. Books piled on table and chair, open at some
page.
Two texts in Finnish. Pipes half smoked, collars : past days not effaced
beneath perpetual tidyness, but scraps and souvenirs of their accidents lying in heaps.
His room in the city, nine feet by six, grave big enough for the six corpses that
is each living man.
Appalling tabernacle of Self and Unbelief.
He was furious with this room, tore down jacket and shirt, and threw the
window open.
The air made him giddy.
He began putting things straight.
The third book, stalely open, which he took up to Bhut, was the M Einige und
Sein Eigenkeit."
Stirnir.
76
One of seven arrows in his martyr mind.
Poof I lie flung ft out of the window.
A few minutes, and there was a knock at his door. It was a young man he
had known in the town, but now saw for the first time, seemingly. He had come
to bring him the book, fallen into the roadway.
" I thought I told you to go I " he said.
The young man had changed into his present disciple.
Obliquely, though he appeared now to be addressing Stirnir.
" I thought I told you to go t "
His visitor changed a third time.
A middle aged man, red cropped head and dark eyes, seli=possessed, loose,
free, student — sailor, Angering the hook : coming to a decision. Stirnir as he had
imagined him.
" Get out, I say. Here is money."
Was the money for the book?
The man flung it at his head ; its cover slapped him sharply.
" Glib tongued cowt Take thatl"
A scrap ensued, physical experiences of recent fight recurring, ending in eviction
of this visitor, and slamming of door.
" These books are all parasites. Poodles of the mind, Chows and King
Charles ; eternal prostitute.
The mind, perverse and gorgeous.
All this Art life, posterity and the rest, is wrong. Begin with these."
He tore up his books.
A pile by door ready to sweep out.
He left the room, and went round to Cafe to find his friends.
" AH companions of parasite Self. No single one a brother.
My dealings with these men is with their parasite composite selves, not with
Them."
The night had come on suddenly. Stars l&e clear rain soaked chillily into nun.
No one was in the street.
77
The sickly houses oozed sad human electricity.
He had wished to clean up, spiritually, his room, obliterate or turn into
deliberate refuse, accumulations of Self,
Now a similar purging must be undertaken among his companions preparatory
to leaving the city.
Hut he never reached the Cafe.
His dream changed ; he was walking dawn the street in his native town, where
he now was* and where he knew no one but his school-mates, workmen, clerks in
export of hemp, grain and wood.
Ahead of him he saw one of the Mends of his years of study in Capital.
He did not question how he had got there, but caught him up. Although
brusquely pitched elsewhere, he went on with his plan.
" Sir, I wish to know you! "
Provisional smile on face of friend, puzzled.
" Hallo, Arghol, you seem upset."
" I wish to make your acquaintance."
" But, my dear Arghol, what's the matter with you?
We already are very well acquainted."
" I am not Arghol,
•' No ? '*
The good-natured smug certitude offended him.
This man would never see anyone but Arghol he knew. — Yet he on his side
saw a man, directly beneath his friend, imprisoned, with intolerable need of
recognition.
Arghol* that the baffling requirements of society had made, impudent parasite
of his solitude, had foregathered too long with men, and borne his name too variously,
to he superseded.
He was sot sure, if they had been separated surgically, in which self life would
have gone out and in which remained.
" This man has been masquerading as me."
He repudiated Arghol, nevertheless.
If eyes of his friends*up=tiil=then could not be opened, he would sweep them,
along with Arghol, into rubbish heap.
78
Arghol was under a dishonouring pact with all of them.
He repudiated it and him.
" So I am Arghol."
** Of course. But if you dou't want "
" That is a lie. Your foolish grin proves you are lying. Good day."
Walking on, he knew his friend was himself. He had divested himself of
something.
The other steps followed, timidly and deliberately : odious invitation.
The sound of the footsteps gradually sent him to sleep.
Next, a Cafe" ; he, alone, writing at table.
He became slowly aware of his friends seated at other end of room, watching
him, as it had actually happened before his return to his uncles house. There he
was behaving as a complete stranger with a set of men he had been on good terms
with two days before.
" He's gone mad. Leave him alone," they advised each other.
As an idiot, too, he had come home ; dropped, idle and sullen, on his relative's
shoulders.
W
jC Jl*
Suddenly, through confused struggles and vague successions of scenes, a new
state of mind asserted itself.
A riddle had been solved.
What could this be?
He was Arghol once more.
Was that a key to something ? He was simply Arghol.
" I am Arghol."
He repeated his name — like sinister word invented to launch a new Soap, in
gigantic advertisement — toilet*necessity, he, to scrub the soul.
He had ventured in his solitude and failed. Arghol he had imagined left in
the city.— Suddenly he had discovered Arghol who had followed him, in Hanp.
Always a deux I
Flung back to extremity of hut, Hanp lay for some time recovering. Then he
thought. Chattel for rest of mankind, Arghol had brutalised him.
Both eyes were swollen pulp.
Shut in : thought for him hardly possible so cut off from visible world.
Sullen indignation at Arghol ACTING, be who had not the right to act.
Violence in him was indecent ; again question of taste.
How loathsome heavy body, so long quiet, flinging itself about : face strained
with intimate expression of act of love.
Finn grip still on him ; outrage.
" Pudeur," in races accustomed to restraint, is the most violent emotion, in
all its developments. Devil redicule, heroism of vice, ideal, god of taste. Why
has it not been taken for root of great Northern tragedy ?
Arghols unweildly sensitiveness, physical and mental, made him a monster in
his own eyes, among other things. Such illusion, imparted with bullet = like direct*
ness to a companion, falling on suitable soil, produced similar conviction.
This humility and perverse aseticism opposed to vigorous animal glorification
of self.
He gave men one image with one hand, and at same time a second, its antidote
with the other.
80
He watched results a little puzzled.
The conflict never ended.
Shyness and brutality, chief ingredients of their drama, fought side by side.
Hanp had been " ordered off," knocked about. Now he was going. Why?
Because he had been sent off like a belonging.
Arghol had dragged him down : had preached a certain life, and now insolently
set an example of the opposite.
Played with, debauched by a mind that could not leave passion in another alone.
Where should he go? Home. Good natured drunken mother, recriminating
and savage at night.
Hanp had almost felt she had no right to be violent and resentful, being weak
when sober. He caught a resemblance to present experiences in tipsy life stretching
to babyhood.
He saw in her face a look of Arghol.
How disgusting she was, his own flesh, Ah ! That was the sensation 1
Arghol, similarly disgusted through this family feeling, his own flesh : though he
was not any relation.
Berlin and nearer city was full of Arghol. He was comfortable where he was.
Arghol had lived for him, worked : impaired his will. Even wheel= making had
grown difficult, whereas Arghol acquitted himself of duties of trade quite easily.
WHOSE energy did he use?
Just now the blows had leapt in his muscles towards Arghol, but were sickened
and did not seem hard. Would he never be able again to hit? Fee! himself hard
and distinct on somebody else ?
That mass, muck, in the corner, that he hated : was it hoarded energy, stolen
or grabbed, which he could only partially use, stagnating ?
Arghol was brittle, repulsive and formidable through this sentiment.
Had this passivity been holy, with charm of a Saint's ?
Arghol was glutted with others, in coma of energy.
He had just been feeding on him — Hanp 1
He REFUSED to act, almost avowedly to infuriate : prurient contempt.
His physical strength was obnoxious : muscles affecting as flabby fat would
in another.
Energetic through sell indulgence.
81
Thick sickly puddle of humanity, lying there by door.
Death, taciturn refrain of his being.
Preparation for Death.
Tip nun over into cauldron in which he persistently gazed : see what happened I
This sleepy desire leapt on to young man's mind, after a hundred other
thoughts — clown in the circus, springing on horses back, when the elegant riders
have hopped, with obsequious dignity down gangway.
$2
mi.
Bluebottle, at first unnoticed, hurtling about, a snore rose quietly on the air.
Drawn out, clumsy, self centred ! It pressed inflexibly on Hanps nerve of
hatred, sending hysteria gyrating in top of diaphragm, flooding neck.
It beckoned, filthy, ogling finger.
The first organ note abated. A second at once was set up : stronger, startling,
full of loathsome unconsciousness.
It purred a little now, quick and labial. Then virile and strident again.
It rose and fell up centre of listener's body, and along swollen nerves, peachy,
clotted tide, gurgling back in slimy shallows. Snoring of a malodorous, bloody,
sink, emptying its water.
More acutely, it plunged into his soul with bestial regularity, intolerable
besmirching*
Aching with disgust and fury, he lay dully, head against ground. At each
fresh offence the veins puffed faintly in his temples.
AH this sonority of the voice that subdued him sometimes : suddenly turned
bestial in answer to his vision
" How can I stand it ! How can I stand it ! "
His whole being was laid bare : battened on by this noise. His strength was
drawn raspingly out of him. In a minute he would be a flabby yelling wreck.
Like a sleek shadow passing down bis face, the rigour of his discomfort changed,
sly volte-face of Nature.
Glee settled thickly on him.
The snore crowed with increased loudness, glad, seemingly, with him ; laughing
that he should have at last learnt to appreciate it. A rare proper world if you
understand it 1
He got up, held by this foul sound of sleep, in dream of action. Rapt beyond
all reflection, he would, martyr, relieve the world of this sound.
Cut out this noise like a cancer.
He swayed and groaned a little, peeping through patches of tumified flesh,
boozer collecting bis senses ; fumbled in pocket.
83
His knife was not there.
He stood still wiping blood off his face.
Then he stepped across shed to where fight had occurred.
The snore grew again : its sonorous recoveries had amazing and startling
strength. Every time it rose he gasped, pressing back a clap of laughter.
With his eyes, it was like looking through goggles.
He peered round carefully, and found knife and two coppers where they had
slipped out of his pocket a foot away from Arghol.
He opened the knife, and an ocean of movements poured Into his body. He
stretched and strained like a toy wound up.
He took deep breaths : his eyes almost closed. He opened one roughly with
two fingers, the knife held stiffly at arms length.
He could hardly help plunging it in himself, the nearest ffesh to him.
He now saw Arghol clearly : knelt down beside him.
A long stout snore drove his hand back. But the next instant the hand rushed
in, and the knife sliced heavily the impious meat. The blood burst out after the
knife.
Arghol rose as though on a spring, his eyes glaring down on Hanp, and with
an action of the head, as though he were about to sneeze. Hanp shrank back, on
his haunches. He overbalanced, and felt on his back.
He scrambled up, and Arghol lay now in the position in which he had been
sleeping.
There was something incredible in the dead figure, the blood sinking down, a
moist shaft, into the ground. Hanp felt friendly towards it.
There was only flesh there, and all our flesh is the same. Something distant,
terrible and eccentric, bathing in that milky snore, had been struck and banished
from matter.
Hanp wiped his hands on a rag, and rubbed at his clothes for a few minutes,
then went out of the hut.
The night was suddenly absurdly peaceful, trying richly to please him with
gracious movements of trees, and gay precessions of arctic clouds.
Relief of grateful universe.
84
A rapid despair settled down on Hanp, a galloping blackness of mood. He
mored quickly to outstrip it, perhaps.
Jfear the gate of the yard he found an idle figure. It was his master. He
ground his teeth almost in this man's face, with an agressive and furious movement
towards him. The face looked shy and pleased, but civil, like a mysterious domestic.
Hanp walked slowly along the canal to a low stone bridge.
His face was wet with tears, his heart beating weakly, a boat slowed down,
A sickly flood of moonlight beat miserably on him, cutting empty shadow he
could hardly drag along.
He sprang from the bridge clumsily, too unhappy for instinctive science? and
sank like lead, his heart a sagging weight of stagnant hatred.
85
THE SADDEST STORY
BY
FORD MADDOX HEUFFER.
Beati Immaculati.
i.
We bad known the Ashbnrahams for nine seasons, of toe
town of Nauheim, with an extreme intimacy — or rather, with
an acquaintance — ship as loose and easy, and yet as close
as a good glove's with your hand. My wife and I knew
Captain and Mrs. Ashburnham as well as it was possible to
know anybody, and yet, in another sense, we knew nothing
at alt about them. This is, I believe, a state of things only
possible with English people, of whom till to-day, when I sit
down to puzzle out what I know of this sad affair, I knew
nothing whatever. Six months ago I had never been to
England and, certainly, I had never sounded the depths of an
English heart. I had known the shallows.
I don't mean to say that we were not acquainted with many
English people. Living, as we perforce lived, in Europe;
and being, as we perforce were, leisured Americans, which
is as much as to say that were un-American — we were
thrown very much into the society of the nicer English,
Paris, yon see, was our home. Somewhere between Nice
and Bordighera provided yearly winter quarters for us, and
Nauheim always received us from July to September. You
will gather from this statement that one of us had, as the
saying is, a " heart " ; and, from the statement that my wife
is dead, that she, poor thing, was the sufferer.
Captain Asbburnham also had a heart. But whereas a
yearly month or so at Nauheim tuned him up to exactly the
right pitch for the rest of the twelve-month, the two months
or so were only just enough to keep poor Florence alive from
year to year. The reason for his heart was approximately
polo, or i»o much hard sportsmanship in his youth. The
reason for poor Florence's broken years may have been in
the first instance congenital, but the immediate occasion was
a storm at sea upon oar first crossing to Europe, and the
immediate reasons for our imprisonment in that continent
were doctors' orders. They said that even the short Channel
crossing might wett km the poor thing,
When we all first met, Captain Ashburnham, home on sick
leave from India, to which he was never to return, was
thirty-six and poor Florence thirty. Thus to-day, Florence
would have been thirty-nine and Captain Asbburnham forty-
two ; whereas I am forty-five and Leonora thirty-seven. You
will perceive therefore that our friendship has been a young
middleaged affair, more particularly since we were all of ns
of quiet dispositions, the Ashburnhams being more particu-
larly what in England it is the custom to call quite good
people.
They were descended, as you will probably expect, from
the Ashburnham who accompanied Charles I. to the scaffold,
and, as yon must also expect with this class of English
people, you would never have noticed it. Mrs, Ashburnham
was a Pewys; Florence was a Hiirlbirl of Stamford,
Connecticut, where, as you know, they are more old-
fashioned than ever the inhabitants of Cranford, England,
could have been. I myself am a Lowell, of Philadelphia, Pa.,
where, it is historically true, there are more old English
families than you would find in any six: English counties taken
together. I carry about with me indeed— as if it were the
only thing that invisibly anchored me to any spot upon the
globe — the title deeds of my farm which once covered the
blocks between Chestnut and Walnut Streets and Sixteen to
Twenty-sixth. These title deeds are upon wampum, the
grant of an Indian chief to the first Doweil, who left Farnham
in Surrey in company with William Penn. Florence's people
as is often the case with the inhabitants of Connecticut, came
from the neighbourhood of F or dingb ridge, where the Ash-
burn ham's place is. From there, at this moment, I am
actually writing.
You may well ask why I write. And yet my reasons are
quite many. For it is not unosual in human beings who
have witnessed the sack of a city or the falling to pieces of
a people, to desire to set down what they have witnessed for
the benefit of unknown heirs or of generations infinitely
87
remote; or, U you please just to get the sight out o! their
beads.
Someone has said that the death of a mouse trout cancer is
the whole sack of Rome by the Goths, and I swear to you
that the breaking-up of our little four-square coterie was
such another unthinkable event. Supposing that you should
come upon as, all four sitting together at one of the little
tables in front of the club house, let us say at Homburg,
taking tea of an afternoon and watching the minature golf,
you would have said, that as human affairs go we were an
extraordinarily safe castle. We were, if you will, one of
those things that seem the proudest and the safest of alt
the beautiful and safe things that God has permitted the
mind of men to frame. Where better could one take refuge?
Where better?
Permanance? Stability! I can't believe it's gone. I
can't believe that that long tranquil life, which was just
stepping a minuet, vanished in four crushing days at the end
of nine years and sis weeks. Upon my word, yes, our
intimacy was like a minuet, simply because on every possible
occasion and in every possible circumstance we knew where
to go, which table we unanimously should choose and we
could rise and go, all four together, without a signal from
any one of us, always to the music of the Kur orchestra,
always in the temperate sunshine, or if it rained, in discreet
shelters. No indeed, it can't be gone. You can't kill a
minuet de la cour. You may shut up the music-book ; close
the harpsichord ; in the cupboard and presses the rats may
destroy the white satin favours.
The mob may sack Versailles ; the Trianon may fall, but
surely the minuet — the minuet itself is dancing itself away
into the furthest stars, even as our minuet of the Hessian
bathing-places must be stepping itself still. Isn't there any
heaven where old beautiful dances, old beautiful intimacies,
prolong themselves? Isn't there any Nirvana pervaded by
the faint thrilling of instruments that have fallen into the
dust of wormwood, but that yet had frail, remulous, and
everiasing souls?
No, by God it is false I It wasn't a minuet that we
stepped; it was a prison—a prison full of screaming
hysterics, tied down so that they might not outsound the
rolling of our carriage- wheels as we went along the shaded
avenues of the Taunus Waid,
And yet, I swear by the sacred name of my creator that
it was true. It was true sunshine ; the true music ; the true
plash of the fountains from the mouth of stone dolphins.
For, if for me we were four people with the same tastes,
with the same desires acting — or no not acting — sitting here
and there unanimously, isn't that the truth? If for nine
years I have possessed a goodly apple that is rotten at the
core, sad discover its rottenness only in sine years and six
months less fonr days, isn't it true to say that for nine years
I possessed a goodly apple?
So it may well be with Edward Ashburnham, with Leonora,
his wife, and with poor dear Florence. And, if you come
to think of it, isn't it a little odd that the physical rotteness
of at least two pillars of our four-square house sever
presented itself to my mind as a menace to its security? It
doesn't so present itself now though the two of them are
actually dead. I don't know. . . .
I know nothing — nothing in the world — of the hearts of
men. I only know that I am alone — horribly alone. No
hearthstones will ever again witness, for me, friendly inter-
course. No smoking-room will ever be other than peopled
with incalculable simulacra amidst smoke-wreathes. Yet,
in the name of God, what should I know if I don't know the
life of the hearth and of the smoking-room, since my whole
life has been passed in those places? The warm hearthsidel
— Well, there was Florence : I believe that for the twelve
years her life lasted after the storm that irretrievably weakened
her heart — I don't believe that tor one minute she was out
of my sight, except when she was safely tucked up in bed
and I should be downstairs, talking to some good fellow or
other in some lounge or smoking-room, or taking my final
turn with a cigar before going to bed. I don't, you under-
stand, blame Florence. But how can she have known what
she knew all the time? How could she have got to know if?
To know it so fully. Heavens t There doesn't seem to have
been the actual time. It must have been when I was taking
my baths, and my Sweedisb exercises, being manicured.
Leading the life I did, of the sedulous, strained nurse,
I hail to do something to keep myself fit. It must have been
then I Yet even that can't have been enough time to get
the tremendously long conversations Ml of worldly wisdom
that Leonora has reported to me since their deaths. And is
it possible to imagine that during our prescribed walks in
Nauheira and the neighbourhood she found time to carry on
the protracted negotiations which she did carry on between
Edward Ashburnham and his wife? And isn't it incredible
that during all that time Edward and Leonora never spoke
a word to each other in private. What is one to think of
humanity?
For I swear to you that they were the model couple. He
was as devoted as it was possible to be without appearing
fatuous. So well set up, with such honest blue eyes, such a
touch of stupidity, such a warm good-heartedness I And
she — so tall, so splendid in the saddle, so fair 1 Yes, Leonora
was extraordinarily fair, and so extraordinarily the real thing
that she seemed too good to be true. You don't, I mean,
as a rule, get it all so superlatively together. To be the
county family, to look the county family, to be so
appropriately and perfectly wealthy ; to be so perfect in
manner — even just to the saving touch of insolence that seems
88
Head.
Frederick Etchells,
■ ■■■■..■■ - ■ .'J.J
Head.
Frederick EtcheMs.
,2
CO
41
■Zi
to be necessary. To have all that and to be all that ! No,
it was too good to be true, And yet, only this afternoon,
talking over the whole matter she said to me:—" Once I
tried to have a lover but I was so sick at the heart, so utterly
worn out that I had to send him away."
That struck me as the most amazing thing I had ever
heard. She said " I was actually in a man's arms. Such a
nice chap 1 Such a dear fellow t And I was saying to my-
self, fiercely, hissing it between my teeth as they say in
novels — and realfy clenching them together: I was saying
to myself; * Now I'm in for it, and I'll really have a good
time for once in my life ; for once in my life ! ' It was in the
dark, in a carriage, coming back from a hunt ball. Eleven
miles we bad to drive! And then suddenly the bitterness of
the endless poverty, of the endless acting — it fell on me like
a blight, it spoilt everything. Yes, I had to realise that I
had been spoilt even for the good time when it came. And
I burst out crying, and I cried and I cried for the whole
eleven miles. Just imagine ME crying! And just imagine
me making a fool of the poor dear chap like that, Ii
certainly wasn't playing the game, was it now? "
I don't know; I don't know; was that last remark of hers
the remark of a harlot, or is it what every decent woman,
county family or not county family, thinks at the bottom of
her heart? Or thinks all the time for the matter of that?
Who knows?
Yet, if one doesn't koow that at this hour and day, at this
pitch of civilisation to which we have attained, after all the
preachings of all the moralists, and all the teachings of all
the mothers to all the daughters in saeculum saeculorum
. . . but perhaps that is what all mothers teach all
daughters, not with lips, but with the eyes, or with
heart whispering to heart. And, if one doesn't know as
much as that about the first thing In the world, what does
one know and why is one here?
I asked Mrs. Ashburnham whether she had told Florence
that and what Florence had said, and she answered; —
" Florence didn't offer any comment at all. What could she
say? There wasn't anything to be said. With the grinding
poverty we had to put up with to keep up appearances, and
the way the poverty came about— YOU know what I mean —
any woman would have been justified in taking a lover and
presents, too. Florence once said about a very similar
position — she was a little too well-bred, too American, to
talk about mine — that it was a case of perfectly open riding,
and the woman eould just act on the spur of the moment.
She said it in American, of course, but that was the sense of
it. I think her actual words were t— " That it was up to her
to take it or leave it . . ."
I don't want yon to think that I am writing Teddy Ashburn-
ham down a brute. I don't believe he was. God knows, per-
haps all mea are like that. For as I've said, what do I koow
even of the smoking-room? Fellows come la and te$ fh*
most extraordinarily gross stories — so gross that they will
positively give yon a pain. And yet they'd be offended if you
suggested that they weren't the sort ol person yoa would
trust you wife alone with. And very likely they'd be quite
properly offended — that is, if yoa can trust anybody alone
with anybody. But that sort of fellow obviously takes more
delight in listening to or in telling gross stories— more delight
than in anything else in the world.
They'll hunt languidly and dress languidly and dine
languidly, and work without enthusiasm, and find it a bore
to carry on three minutes conversation about anything what*
ever, and yet, when the other sort of conversation begins
they'll laugh, and wake up and throw themselves about In
their chairs. Then, if they so delight in the narration, how
is it possible that they can be offended — and properly offended
at the suggestion that they might make attempts apoa your
wife's honour? Or again: Edward Ashburnham was the
cleanest looking sort of chap ; an excellent magistrate, a first
rate soldier, one of the best landlords, so they said ta
Hampshire, England, To the poor and to hopeless
drunkards, as I myself have witnessed, he was like a pains-
taking guardian. And he never told a story that couldn't
have gone into the columns of the " Field," more than once
or twice in all the nine years of my knowing him. He didn't
even like hearing them, he would fidget and get up and go
out to buy a cigar or something of that sort. You woald
have said that he was just exactly the sort of chap that yoa
could have trusted your wife with. And I trusted mine, and
it was madness.
And yet again you have me. If poor Edward was danger-
ous because of the chastity of his expressions — and they say
that that is always the hall=mark of a libertine— what about
myself? For I solemnly avow that not only have I never so
much as hinted at an impropriety in my conversation in the
whole course of my life, and more than that, I will vouch for
the cleanness of my thoughts and the absolute chastity el
my life.
At what then does it ail work out? Is the whole thing
a folly and a mockery? Am I no better than a ennach, or is
the proper man — tbe man with the right to existence — a
raging stallion forever, neighing after his neighbour's
wo mentis d?
I don't know. And there is nothing to guide us. And if
everything is so nebulous about a matter so elementary as
as the morals of sex, what is there to guide us in the mora
subtle morality of ail other personal contacts, associations
and activities? Or are we meant to act oa impulse alone?
It is all a darkness.
II.
1 don't know bow it is best to pat this thing down—
whether it would be better to try and tell the story from the
89
beginning, as if H we** a story, or whether to tell it from
this distance of time, as it reached me from lie lips of
Leonora, or from those ol Edward himself.
So I shall fust imagine myself for a fortnight or so at one
side of the fireplace of a country cottage, with a sympathetic
soul opposite me. And I shall go on talking, in a low voice
while the sea sounds in the distance, and overhead the great
black flood of wind polishes the bright stars. From time to
time we shall get op and go to the door and look out at the
bright moon and say: — " Why it is nearly as bright as in
Provence! " And then we shall come back to the fireside,
with just the touch of a sigh because we are not in that
Provence where even the saddest stories are gay.
Consider the lamentable history of Peire Vidal. Two
years ago Florence and I motored from Biarritz to Las Tours,
which is in the Black Mountains, In the middle of
a tortuous valley there rises up a pinnacle, and on the
pinnacle are four castles — Las Tours, the Towers, And the
immense mistral blew down that valley which was the way
from France into Provence so that the silver grey olive leaves
appeared like hair flying in the wind, and the tufts of rose-
mary crept into the iron rocks that they might not be
torn up by the roots.
It was, of course, poor dear Florence who wanted to go to
Las Tours. You are to imagine that, however, much her
bright personality came from Stamford Connecticut, she was
yet a graduate of Poughkeepsie. I never could imagine how
she did it — the queer, e battery person that she was. With
the faraway look in her eyes — which wasn't, however, in the
least romantic — I mean that she didn't look as if she were
seeing poetic dreams, or looking through you, for she hardly
ever did look at you ! — holding up one hand as if she wished
to silence any objection — or any comment for the matter of
that — she would talk. She would talk about William the
Silent, about Gustave the Loquacious, about Paris frocks,
about how the poor dressed in 1337, about Fantin Latour,
about the Paris-Lyons-Medlterranee train-de-J«xe, about
whether it would be worth while to get off at Tarascon and
go across the windswept suspension-bridge, over the Rhone,
to take another look at Beaucatre.
We never did take another look at Beaucaire, of course —
beautiful Beaucaire with the high, triangular white tower,
that looked as thin as a needle and as tall as the Fhttiros
between Fifth and Broadway— Beaucaire with the grey walls
on tbe top o! the pinnacle surrounding an acre and a half of
blue irises, beneath the tallness of the stone pines. What a
beautiful thing the stoae pine is . . ,
No we never did go back anywhere. Not to Heidleberg,
not to Hamblin, not to Verona, not to Mount Magnus — not
so much as to Carassone Itself. We talked of It, of course,
but I guess Florence got alt she wanted out of one look at
a place. She had the seeing eye.
1 haven't, unfortunately, so that the world is full of places
to which I want to return — towns with the white
sun upon them; stone pises against the blinking blue of the
sky; corners of gables, all carved and painted with stags
and scarlet flowers, and crowstepped gables with the little
saint at the top ; and grey and pink pallazzi and walled towns
a mile or so back from the sea, on the Mediterranean, between
Leghorn and Naples. Not one of them did we see more than
once, so that the whole world for me is like spots of colour
in an Immense canvas. Perhaps if it weren't so I should
have something to catch hold of now.
Is all this digession or isn't it digression? Again I don't
know. You, the listener, sit opposite me. But you are so
silent You don't tell me anything. I am at any rate trying
to get you to see what sort of life it was I led with Florence,
and what Florence was like.
Well, she was bright; and she danced. She seemed to
dance over the floors of castles and over seas, and
over the salons of modistes, and over the plages of the
Riviera — like a gay tremulous beam, reflected from water
upon a ceiling. And my function in life was to keep that
bright thing in existence. And it was almost as difficult as
trying to catch with your hand that dancing reflection, and
tbe task lasted for years.
Florence's aunts used to say that I must be the lazest man
in Philadelphia. They had sever been to Philadelphia and
they had the New England conscience, You see, the first
thing they said to me when I called in on Florence in the
little ancient, colonial, wooden house beneath the high thin-
Leaved elms — the first question they asked me was, not how
I did, but what did I do. And I did nothing. I suppose I
ought to have done something, but I didn't see any call to
do it. Why does one do things? I just drifted in and
wanted Florence. First I had drifted in on Florence at a
Browning tea, or something of the sort in Fourteenth Street,
which was then stili residential, I don't know why I had
gone to New York; I don't know why I had gone to the
tea, I don't see why Florence should have gone
to that sort of spelling bee. It wasn't the place at which,
even then, you expected to find a Poughkeepsie graduate.
I guess Florence wanted to raise the culture of the Stuyesant
crowd, and did it as she might have gone in slumming.
Intellectual slumming, that was what it was, She always
wanted to leave the world a little more elevated than she
found it. Poor dear thing, I have heard her lecture Teddy
Ashburnham by the hour on the difference between a Franz
Hals and a Wouvermans, and why the Pre-Mycenaie statues
were cubical with knobs on the top. I wonder what he made
of It? Perhaps he was thankful.
I know I was. For do yon understand my whole atten-
tions, ray whole endeavours were to keep poor dear Florence
on to the topics tike the finds at Gnossos and the mental
90
spirituality of Walter Pater. ! had to keep her at it yon
understand or she might die. For I was solemnly informed
that if she became excited over anything, or if her emotions
were really stirred, her little heart might cease to beat. For
twelve years I had to watch every word that any person
uttered in any conversation, and I had to head it off what
the English call " things "—off , love, poverty, crime,
religion, and the rest oi it. Yes, the first doctor that we had
when she was carried off the ship at Havre assured me that
this mast be done. Good God, are all these fellows
monstrous idiots, or is there a free-masonry between all ol
them from end to end of the earth? . . . That is what
makes me think of that fellow Peire Vidal,
Because, of course, his story is culture, and I had to head
her towards culture, and at the same time it's so funny and
she hadn't got to laugh, and it's so full of love and she
wasn't to think of love. Do you know the story? Las
Tours of the Four Castles had for chatelaine Blanche Some*
body -or- other who was called as a term of commendation, La
Louve— the She- Wolf. And Peire Vidal, the Troubadour,
paid his court to La Louve, And she wouldn't have anything
to do with him. So, out of compliment to heri — the things
people do when they're in love! — he dressed himself up in
wolf-skins and went up into the Black Mountains, And the
shepherds of the Montague Noire and their dogs mistook
him for a wolf, and he was torn with the fangs and beaten
with clubs. So they carried him back to Las Tours and
La Louve wasn't at all impressed. They polished him up,
and her husband remonstrated seriously with her. Vidal
was, you see, a great poet, and it was not proper to treat
a great poet with indiSerenece.
So Peire Vidal declared himself Emperor of Jerusalem or
somewhere, and the husband had to kneel down and kiss hte
feet though La Louve wouldn't. And Peire set sail in a
rowing boat with four companions to redeem the Holy
Sepulchre. And they struck on a rock somewhere, and, at
great expense, the husband had to fit out an expedition to
fetch him back. And Peire Vidal fell all over the lady's bed,
while the husband, who was a most ferocious warrior, remon-
strated some more about the courtesy that is due to great
poets. But 1 suppose La Louve was the more ferocious of
the two. Anyhow that is all that came of it. Isn't that
a story?
You haven't an idea of the queer old fashionedness of
Florence's aunts — the Misses Hurlbird, nor yet of her uncfe.
An extraordinarily lovable man, that Uncle John. Thin,
gentle, and with a "heart" that made his life very much
what Florence's afterwards became.
He didn't reside at Stamford ; his home was in Waterbury,
where the watches come from. He had a factory there
which, in our queer American way, would change its
functions almost from year to year. For nine months or to
it would manufacture buttons out of bone, Then it would
suddenly produce brass buttons for coachman's liveries.
Then it would take a turn at embossed tin lids for candy
boxes. The fact is that the poor old gentleman, with bis
weak and fluttering heart didn't want his factory to manu-
facture anything at alt. He wanted to retire. And he did
retire when he was seventy. But he was so worried at
having all the street boys in the town point after bim and
exclaim : " There goes the laziest man in Waterbury 1 " that
he tried taking a tour round the world. And Florence and
a young man called Jimmy went with him. It appears from
what Florence toid me that Jimmy's function with Mr.
Hurlbird was to avoid exciting topics for him. He had to
keep him, for instance, out ot political discussions. For the
poor old man was a violent Democrat in days when yon might
travel the world over without finding anything but a
Republican. Anyhow they went round the world.
I think an anecdote is about the best way to give yon an
idea of what the old gentleman was like. For it Is perhaps
important that you should know what the old gentleman was
since, of course, he had a great deal of influence In forming
the character of my poor dear wife.
Just before they set out from San Francisco for the South
Seas old Mr. Hulbird said he must take something with him
to make little presents to people he met on the voyage.
And it struck him that the things to take for that purpose
were oranges—because California Is the orange country —
and comfortable folding chairs. So he bought I don't know
how many cases of oranges — the great cool Californian
oranges and half-a-dozen folding chairs in a special case
that he always kept in his cabin. There must have bees
half a cargo of fruit.
For, to every person on beard the several steamers that
they employed — to every person with whom he had so much
as a nodding acquaintance, he gave an orange every
morning. And they lasted him right round the girdle o! this
mighty globe of ours. When they were at North Cape,
even, be saw on the horizon, poor dear thin man that he was,
a lighthouse, "Hallo," he says, to himself, "these poor
fellows must be very lonely. Let's take them some
oranges." So he had a boatload of his fruit out and had
humself rowed to the lighthouse on the horizon. The folding-
chairs he lent to any lady that he came across and liked,
or who seemed tired and invalidlsh on the ship. And so,
guarded against his heart and, having his niece with him,
he went round the world, . . .
He wasn't obtrusive about his heart. You wouldn't have
known he had one. He only left it to the physical laboratory
at Waterbury for the beneSt of science, since h» considered
it to be quite an extraordinary kind of heart. And the joke
of the matter was that, when at the age of eighty-four, just
91
£ve days after poor Florence, he died of bronchitis, there
was found to be absolutely nothing the matter with that
organ. It bad certainly jaasped or squeaked or something,
just sufficiently to take in the doctors, but It appears that
that was because of as odd formation of the kings. I don't
much understand about these matters.
I inherited his money because Florence died five days before
him. I wish I hadn't. It was a great worry. I had to go
out to Waterbury just after Florence's death, because the
poor dear old fellow had left a good many charitable
bequests and I had to appoint trustees. I didn't iike the
idea of their sot being properly handled.
Yes, it was a great worry. And just as I had got things
roughly settled 1 received the extraordinary cable from Ash-
burnham begging me to come back and have a talk with him.
And immediately afterwards came one from Leonora saying,
" Yes, please do come. You could be so helpful." It was
as if he had sent the cable without consulting her and had
afterwards toid her. Indeed that was pretty much what had
happened, except that he had told the girl, and the girl totd
the wife. I arrived, however, too late to be of any good,
if I could have been of any good. And then I had my first
taste of English life. It was amazing. It was overwhelm-
ing. I never shall forget the polished cob that Edward,
beside me, drove, the animal's action, its high-stepping, its
skin that was like satin. And the peace 1 And the red
cheeks 1 And the beautiful old house.
Just near Branshaw Teferagh it was, and we descended
on it from the high, clear, windswept waste of the New
Forest. I tell you it was amazing to arrive there from
Waterbury. And it came into ray head — for Teddy Ash-
burnbam, you remember had cabled to me to " come and
have a talk " with him — that it was unbelievable that any-
thing essentially calamitous could happen to that place and
those people. I tell yon it was the very spirit of peace.
And Leonora, beautiful and smiling, with her coils of yellow
hair stood on the loop doorstep, with a batter and footman
and a maid or so behind her. And she just said : " So glad
you've come," as if I'd run down to lunch from a town ten
miles away, instead of having come half the world over at the
call o! two urgent telegrams.
The girl was out with the hounds I think.
And that poor devil beside me was in an agony. Absolute,
hopessss, dumb agony such as passes the miad of man to
tsssglae,
HI.
It was a very hot summer, in August, 1904, and Florence
had already been taking the baths for a month. I don't know
how it feels to be a patient at one of those places. I never
was a pattest anywhere. I daresay the patients get a home
feeling and some sort of anchorage in the spot. They seem
to Uke the bath attendants, with their cheerful faces, their
air of authority, their white linen. But, for myself, to be
at Naubeim gave me a sense — what shall I say? — a sense
almost of nakedness — the nakedness that one feels on the
sea-shore or in any great open space. I had no attachments,
no accumulations. In one's own home it is as if little,
innate sympathies draw one to particular chairs that seem to
enfold one in an embrace, or take one along particular streets
that seem friendly when others may be hostile. And, believe
me, that feeling is a very important part of life. I know it
well, that have been for so long a wanderer upon the face
of public resorts.
And one is too polished up. Heaven knows I
was never an untidy man. But the feeding that I bad when,
whilst poor Florence was taking her morning bath, I stood
upon the carefully swept steps of the Englisher Hof, looking
at the carefully arranged trees in tubs upon the carefully
arranged gravel, whilst carefully arranged people walked
past in carefully calculated gaiety, at the carefully calculated
hour ; the reddish stone of the baths — or were they white half-
timber chalets? Upon my word I have forgotten, I who was
there so often. That will give you the measure of how much
I was in the landscape. I could find my way blind-folded
to the hot rooms, to the douche rooms, to the fountain is the
centre ol the quadrangle where the rusty waer gushes out.
Yes, I could find my way blind-fold. I know the exact
distances. From the Hotel Reglna yon took one hundred
and eighty-seven paces, then, turning sharp, left-handed,
four hundred and twenty took you straight down to the
fountain. From the Englisbcber Hoi, starting on the side
walk, it was ninety-seven paces, and the same four hundred
and twenty, but turning left-handed this time.
And now you understand that, having nothing in the world
t« do — but nothing whatever ! I feil into the habit of
counting my footsteps. I wonld walk with Florence to the
baths. And, of course, she entertained me with her con-
versation. It was, as I have said, wonderful what she could
make conversation out of.
She walked very lightly, and her hair was very nicely done,
and she dressed beautifully and very costily. Of course, she
had money of her own, but I shouldn't have minded. And
yet you know I can't remember a single one of her dresses.
Or 1 can remember just one, a very simple one of blue figured
silk — a Chinese pattern — very full in the skirts and broaden-
tsg oat over the sfeonlders. And her hair was copper
setosifed, and the hsels o? her shoes were exeeediiagly high,
so that she tripped upon the points ol her toes. And when
she came to the door of the bathing place and, when it
opened to receive her, she would look back at me with a little
coquettish smile, so that her cheek appeared to be caressing
her shoulder.
99
I seem to remember that, with (hat dress, she wore an
immensely broad Leghorn hat— like the Chapeaa de Paille of
Rubens, only very white. The hat would be tied with a
lightly knotted scarf of the same staff as her dress. She
knew how to give value to her blue eyes. And Toimd her
neck would be some simple pink, coral beads. And her
complexion had a perfect clearness, a perfect smooth-
ness. . . .
And, what the devil! For whose benefit did she do it?
For that of the bath attendant? of the passers-by? I don't
know. Anyhow it can't have been for me, for never, in all
the years of her life, never on any possible occasion, or in
any other place did she so smile tome, mockingly, invitingly.
Ah, she was a riddle ; but then, all other women are riddles.
And it occurs to me that some way back I began a sentence
that I have never finished ... It was about the feeling
that I had when I stood on the steps of my hotel every
morning before starting out to fetch Florence back from the
bath. Natty, precise, well brushed, conscious of being
rather small amongst the long English, the lank Americans,
the rotund Germans, and the obese Russian Jewesses. I
should stand there tapping a cigarette on the outside of my
case, surveying for a moment the world in the sunlight.
But a day was to come when I was never to do it again
alone. You can imagine, therefore, what the coming of the
Ashburabams meant for me.
1 have forgotten the aspect of many things, but I shall
never forget the aspect of the dining-room of the Hotel
Excelsion on that evening — and on so many other evenings,
Whole castles have vanished from my memory, whole cities
that i have never visited again, but that white room,
festooned with paper-mache fruits and Sowers ; the fall
windows ; the many tables ; the black screen round the door
with three golden cranes flying upward on each panel; the
palm-tree in the centre of the room; the swish of the waiter's
feet ; the cold expensive elegance ; the mien o! the diners as
they came in every evening — their air of earnestness as if
they mast go through a meal prescribed by the Kur authori-
ties, and their air oi sobriety as if they must seek not by any
means to enjoy their meals — those things I shall not easily
forget.
And then, one evening, in the twilight, I saw Edward
Ashburnham lounge round the screen into the room. The
head waiter, a man with a face all grej — in what subterranean
nooks or corners do people cultivate those absolutely grey
complexions? — went with the timorous deference of these
creatures towards him and held out a grey ear to he whispered
Into. It was generally a disagreeable ordeal for newcomers,
but Edward Ashburnham bore it like an Englishman and a
gentleman^ I could see his lips form a word of three
syllables—remember I had nothing In the world to do but to
notice these nicities— and immediately I knew that hie most
b« Edwara Ashburnham, Captain, Fourteenth Hassan, of
Branshaw House, Branshaw Teleragh. I knew it because
every evening just before dinner, whilst I waited in the hall
1 used by the conrtesy of Monsieur Schontr, the proprietor,
to inspect the little police reports that each guest was ex-
pected to sign upon taking a room.
The head waiter piloted him immediately to a vacant table,
three away from my own— the table that the Grenfalis of
Falls River N. J. had just vacated, It struck me that that
was not a very nice table for the newcomers, since the sun-
light, low though it was, shone straight down upon it, and
the same idea seemed to come at the same moment Into
Captain Ashburnhain's head. His face hitherto had in the
wonderful English fashion, expressed nothing whatever.
Nothing. There was in it neither joy nor despair; neither
hope nor fear ; neither boredom nor satisfaction. He seemed
to perceive no soul in that crowded room ; he might have
been walking in a jungle. I never came across such a perfect
expression before, and I never shall again. It was insolence
and not insolence ; it was modesty and not modesty. His
hair was fair, extraordinarily, ordered in a wave, running
from the left temple to the right ; his face was a light brick-
red, perfectly uniform in tint, his yellow moustache
was as stiff as a tooth brush, and I verily believe
that he had had his black smoking jacket thickened a
little over the shoulder-blades so as to give himself
the air of the slightest possible stoop. It would be like him
to do that; that was the sort of thing he thought about.
Martingales, Chiffney bits, boots; where you got tne best
soap, the best brandy, the name of the chap who road a plater
down the Khyber cliffs ; the spreading power of number three
shot before a charge of number four powder ... by
heavens, I never heard him talk of anything else. Not in
all the years that I knew him did I hear him talk of anything
but these subjects. Oh yes, once he told me that I could buy
my special shade of bine ties cheaper from a firm in Burling-
ton Arcade than from my own people in New York. Acd
1 have brought my ties from that firm ever since. Otherwise
I should not remember the name of the Burlington Arcade,
I wonder what it looks like. I have never seen It. I imagine
it to be two immense rows of pillars, like those of the Forum
at Rome, with Edward Ashburnham striding down between
them. But it probably isn't in the least like that. Once also
fee advised me to buy Caledonian Deferred, since they were
due to rise. And I did buy them and they did rise. But of
how he got the knowledge I haven't the faintest idea. It
seemed to drop oat of the blue sky.
And that was absolutely all that I knew of him until a
month ago — that and the profusion of his cases, all of pigskin
and stamped with his initials E. F. A, There were gnn cases,
and collar eases, and shirt oases, and letter cases, and cases
each containing four bottles of medicine; and hat cases and
helmet cases. It must have needed a whole herd of the
a&
GaJrene Swine to make up bis outfit. And, 1! I ever pene-
trated into his private room it would be to see him standing
with bis coat and waistcoat off and the immensely long line of
his perfectly elegant trousers from waist to boot heel. And
he would have a slightly reflective air, and he would be just
opening one kind of case and just closing another.
Good God, what did they all see in him; for what
there was of him, aside and outside; though they
said he was a good soldier. Yet Leonora adored him with a
passion that was like an agony, and hated him with an agony
that was as bitter as the sea. How could he rouse anything
like a sentiment, in anybody?
What did he even talk to them about — when they were
under four eyes? — Ah, well, suddenly, as if by a flash of
inspiration, I know. For all good soldiers are senti-
mentalists — all good soldiers of that type. Their profession
for one thing is full of the big words, courage, loyalty,
honour, constancy. And I have given a wrong impression
ol Edward Ashburnham if I have made you think that literally
never in the course of our nine years ol intimacy did he dis-
cuss what he would have called "the graver things."
Even before his final outburst to me, at times, very late
at night, say, he has blurted out something that gave an
insight into the sentimental view o! he cosmos that was his.
He would say how much the society of a good woman could
do towards redeeming you, and he would say that constancy
was the finest of the virtues. He said it very shily, of course,
but still as if the statement admitted of no doubt.
Constancy! Isn't that the queer thought? And yet, i
must add that poor dear Edward was a great reader — he
would pass hours lost in novels of a sentimental type — novels
in which typewriter girls married Marquises, and governesses,
Earls. And in his books, as a rule, the course of true love
ran as smooth as buttered honey. And he was fond of poetry,
of a certain type — and he could even read a hopelessly sad
love story. I have seen his eyes filled with tears at reading
of a hopeless parting. And he loved, with a sentimental
yearning, all children, puppies, and the feeble generally.
So, you see, he would have plenty to gurgle about to a
woman — with that and his sound common-sense about mar-
tingales and his — still sentimental — experiences as a county
magistrate, and with his intense, optimistic belief that the
woman he was making love to at he moment was the one he
was destined, at last, to be enternally constant to . . .
Well, I fancy he could put up a pretty good deal of talk
when there was no man around to make him fee! shy.
And I was quite astonished, during bis final burst out to
me — at the very end of things, when the poor girl was on her
way to that fatal Brindisi, and he was trying to persuade him-
self and me that he had never really cared for her— I was quite
astonished to observe how literary and how just his expres-
sions were. He talked like quite a good boob — a book sot
in the least cheaply sentimental. You see, I suppose he
regarded me not so much as a man, I had to be regarded
as a woman or a solicitor. Anyhow, it burst out of him on
that horrible night. And then, next morning he took me over
to the Assizes and I saw how, in a perfectly calm and
business-like way be set to work to secure a verdict of not
guilty lor a poor girl, the daughter o! one of his tenants, who
had been accused of murdering her baby. He spent two
hundred pounds on her defence . . . Well, that was
Edward Ashburnham.
I had forgotten about his eyes. They were as blue as the
sides of a certain type of box of matches. When you looked
at them carefully you saw that they were perfectly honest,
perfectly straigiit-forward, perfectly, perfectly stupid. But
the brick pink of his complexion, running perfectly level to
the brick pink ol his inner eye-lids gave them a curious,
sinister expression — like a mosaic oi blue porcelain set in
pink china. And that chap, coming into a room snapped up
the gaze of every woman in it, as dexterously as a conjuror
pockets billiard balls. It was most amazing.
You know the man on the stage who throws up sixteen
balls at once and they all drop into pockets all over his
person, on his shoulders, on his heels, on the inner side ol
his sleeves; and he stands perfectly still and does nothing.
Well it was like that. He had rather a rough, hoarse voice.
And, there he was, standing by the table. I was looking
at him, with my back to the screen. And, suddenly, I saw
two distinct expressions flicker across his immobile eyes.
How the deuce did they do it, those unflinching blue eyes with
the direct gaze? For the eyes themselves never moved,
gazing over my shoulder towards the screen. And the gaze
was perfectly level and perfectly direct, and perfectly un-
changing. I suppose that the lids really must have rounded
themselves a little, and perhaps the lips moved a little too,
as if he should be saying: — " There you are my dear." At
any rate the expression was that of pride, the satisfaction of
the possessor. I saw him once afterwards, for a moment,
gaze upon the sunny fields of Branshaw and say : — " Alt this
is my land I "
And then again, the gaze was perhaps more direct, harder
if possible — hardy, too. It was a measuring look ; a
challenging look. Once when we were at Wiesbaden watch-
ing him play in a polo match against the Bonner Hussaren,
I saw the same look come into his eyes, balancing the possi-
bilities, looking over the ground.
The German Captain, Count Idigon von Lelftffel was right
up by their goal posts, coming with the ball is an easy canter
in that tricky German fashion. The rest of the field were
just anywhere. It was only a scratch sort of affair. Asb>
buraara was quite close to the rails, not five yards from ns,
Wl
and I heard him saying to himself: "Might just be done!"
And he did it. Goodness ! he swung that pony round with
all its four legs spread out, like a cat dropping off a
roof , , .
Well, it was just that look that 1 noticed in his eyes : " It
might," I seem even sow to hear him muttering to himself,
"just be done."
I looked round over my shoulder, and saw tali, smiling
brilliantly and buoyant— Leonora. And, little and fair, and
as radiant as the track of sunlight along the sea — my wile.
That poor wretch ! to think that he was at that moment
in a perfect devil of a fix, and there he was, saying at the
back of his mind : " It might just be done." It was like a
chap in the middle of the eruption of a volcano, saying that
he might just manage to bolt into the tumult and set Sre
to a haystack. Madness? Predistination? Who the devil
knows?
Mrs. Ashburnham exhibited at that moment more gaiety
than I have ever since known her to show. There are certain
classes of English people — the nicer ones when they have
been to many spas who seem to make a point of becoming
much more than usually animated when they are introduced
to my compatriots, I have noticed this after. Of coarse,
they must first have accepted the Americans. But, that once
done tttsy seem to say to themselves: " Hallo, these women
are so brignt. We aren't going to be outdone in brightness."
And for the time being they certainly aren't. But it wears
off. So it was with Leonora — at least, until she noticed me.
She began, Leonora did — and perhaps it was that that gave
me the idea of a touch of insolence in her character, for she
never afterwards did any one single thing like it — she began
by saying in quite a loud voice and from quite a distance:
" Don't stop over by that stuffy old table, Teddy. Come
and sit by these nice people 1 "
And that was an extraordinary thing to say. Quite extra-
ordinary. I couldn't for the life of me refer to total strangers
as nice people. But, of course, she was taking a line of her
own in which I at any rate — and no one else in the room, for
she too had taken the trouble to read through the list of
guests — counted any more than so many clean, bull terriers.
And she sat down rather brilliantly at a vacant table, beside
ours — one that was reserved for the Guggenheimers. And
she just sat absolutely deaf to the remonstrances of the head
waiter with his face like a grey ram's. That poor chap was
doing his steadfast duty too. He knew that the Guggen-
heimers of Chicago after they had stayed there a month and
had worried the poor life out of him would give him two
dollars fifty and grumble at the tipping system. And he
knew that Teddy Ashburnham and his wife would give hist
no trouble whatever, except what the smiles of Leonora might
cause la Us apparently tmimpfeasforiabie bosom — though ywo
merer can tell what may go on behind even a not quite spotless
plastron ! — And every week Edward Ashburnham would give
him a solid, sound, golden English sovereign. Yet this stout'
fellow was intent on saving that table for the Guggenheimers,
of Chicago, It ended in Florence saying :
" Why shouldn't we all eat out of the same trough — that's
a nasty New York saying. But I'm sure we're all nice quiet
people, and there can be four seats at our table. It's round."
Then came as it were an appreciative gurgle from the
Captain, and I was perfectly aware of a slight hesitation — a
quick sharp motion in Mrs. Ashburnham, as if her horse had
checked. But she put it at the fence all right, rising from
the seat she had takes and sitting down opposite me, as it
were, all in one motion.
I never thought that Leonora looked her best in evening
dress. She seemed to get it too clearly cut, there was no
rufliing. She always affected black and her shoulders were
too classical. She seemed to stand out of her corsage as a
white marble bust might out of black Wedgwood vase. I
don't know.
I loved Leonora always and, to*day, I would very cheer-
fully lay down my life, what is left of it, in her service. But
I am sure I never had the beginnings of a trace of what is
called the sex instinct towards her.
And I suppose — no I am certain that she never had it
towards me. As far as I am concerned 1 think it was those
white shoulders that did it. I seemed to feel when 1 looked
at them that, if ever 1 should press my lips upon them,
they would be slightly cold — not icily, not without a touch
oi human heat, but, as they say of baths, with the chill off.
I seemed to feel chilled at the end of my lips when I looked
at her . » *
No, Leonora always appeared to me at her best in a blue
taiior-made. Then her glorious hair wasn't deadened by
anything in the world. Certain women's lines guide your
eyes to their necks, their eyelashes, their lips, their breasts.
But Leonora's seemed to conduct your gaze always to her
wrist. And the wrist was at its best in a black or a dog-
skin glove, and there was always a gold circlet with a little
chain supporting a very small golden key to a dispatch box.
Perhaps it was that in which she locked up her heart and
her feelings.
Anyhow, she sat down opposite me and then, for the first
time, she paid any attention to my existence. She gave me,
suddenly, yet deliberately, one long stare. Her eyes, too,
were blue and dark, and the eyelids were so arched that they
gave you the whole round of the irises. And it was a most
remarkable, a most moving glance, as if for a moment a
lighthouse had looked at me* I seemed to perceive the swift
questions chasing eatfh other through the brain that was
95
behind them. I seemed to hear the brain ask and the eyes
answer with all the simpleness of a woman who was a good
hand at taking in qualities of a horse— as indeed she was.
" Stands well, has plenty of room tor his oats behind the
girth. Not so much is the way of shoulders," and so on.
And so her eyes asked : " Is this man trustworthy in money
matters; is he likely to try to play the lover; is he likely
to let his women be troublesome? Is he above all likely to
babble about my affairs? "
And suddenly, into those cold, slightly defiant, almost
defensive china blue orbs, there came a warmth, a tenderness,
a friendly recognition . . , Oh, it was very charming
and very touching — and quite mortifying. It was the look
of a mother to her son, of a sister to her brother. It implied
trust; it implied the want of any necessity lor barriers, By
God, she Looked at me as if I were an invalid — as any kind
woman may look at a poor chap in a bath chair. And, yes,
from that day forward she always treated me and not Florence
as if I were the invalid. Why, she would mo after me with
a rug upon chilly days. I suppose therefore that her eyes
had made a favourable answer. Or perhaps it wasn't a
favourable answer. And then Florence said: "And so the
whole round table is begun." Again Edward Ashburnham
gurjed slightly in his throat ; but Leonora shivered a little, as
if a goose had walked over her grave. And I was passing
her the nickel-silver basket of rolls. Avanti! . . ,
So began those nine years of uninterrupted tranquility.
They were characterised by an extraordinary want of any
communicativeness on the part of the Ashburnhams, to which
we on our part replied by leaving out quite as extraordinarily,
and nearly as completely, the personal note. Indeed, you
may take it that what characterised our relationships more
than anything else was an atmosphere of taking everything
for granted. The given proposition was, that we were all
"good people."' We took for granted that we all liked
beef underdone, but not too underdone ; that both men pre-
ferred a good liqueur brandy after lunch ; that both women
drank a very light Rhine wine qualified with Fachingen
water — that sort of thing.
It was also taken for granted that we were both sufficiently
well off to afford anything that we could reasonably want in
the way of amusements fitting to our station — that we could
take motor cars and carriages by the day ; that we could give
each other dinners and dine our friends, and we could indulge
if we liked is economy. Thus, Florence was in the habit of
having the " Daily Telegraph " sent to her every day from
London. She was always an Angle-maniac, was Florence ;
file Paris edition of the " New York Herald " was always
good enough for me. But when we discovered that the
Ashburnham's copy of that London paper followed them from
England, Leonora and Florence decided between them to
suppress one subscription one year and the other the next.
Similarly it was the habit of the Grand Duke of Nassau
Sehwerin, who came yearly to the baths to dine once with
about eighteen families of regular Kur guests. In return he
would give a dinner to all the eighteen at once. And, since
these dinners were rather expensive— you had to take the
Grand Duke and a good many of bis suite, and any members
of the diplomatic bodies that might be there — Florence and
Leonora, patting their heads together, didn't see why we
shouldn't give the Grand Duke his dinner together. And so
we did. I don't suppose the Serenity minded that economy,
or even noticed it. At any rate our joint dinner to the Royal
Personage gradually assumed the aspect of a yearly function.
Indeed, it grew larger and larger, until it became a sort ol
closing function for the season, at any rate as far as we were
concerned.
I don't in the least mean to say that we were the sort of
persons who aspired to " mix " with royalty." We didn't;
we hadn't any claims; we were just "good people." But
the Grand Duke was a pleasant, affable sort of royalty, like
the late King Edward VII, and it was pleasant to hear him
talk about the races and, very occasionally, as a bonne
bouche, about his nephew, the Emperor ; or to have him pause
for a moment in his walk to ask after the progress of our
cures, or to be benignantiy interested in the amount of money
we had put on Lelogei's hunter for the Frankfurt Welter
Stakes.
But upon my word, I don't know how : we put in our time.
How does one put in one's time? How is it possible to have
achieved nine years and to have nothing what ever to show
for it? Nothing whatever you understand. Not so much
as a bone penholder, carved to resemble a chessman, with
a hole in the top through which you could see four views of
Nauheim. And, as for experience, as fur knowledge of one's
fellow beings — nothing either. Upon my word I couldn't tell
you offhand whether the lady who sold the so expensive
violets at the bottom of the road that leads to the station was
cheating me or no ; I can't tell whether the porter who carried
our traps across the station at Leghorn was a thief or no when
he said that the regular tariff was a lire a parcel. The
instances of honesty that one comes across in this world are
just as amazing as the instances of dishonesty. Ose
ought to have acquired the habit of being able to know some*
thing about one's fellow beings. But one doesn't.
I think the modern civilised habit — the modern English
habit of taking everyone for granted is a good deal to blame
for this. I have observed this matter long enough to know
the queer, subtle, thing that it is ; to know how the faculty,
for what it is worth, never lets you down.
Mind, I am not saying that this is not the most desirable
type of life in the world ; that it is not an almost unreasonably
high standard. For it is really nauseating, when you detest
it, to have to eat every day several slices of tbin, tepid pink
Dancers.
VV. Roberts.
XI!]
Religion.
W. Roberts.
india-rubber, and it Is disagreeable to have to drink brandy
when you would prefer to be cheered up by warm, sweet
Kummel. And it is nasty to bave to take a cold bath in
the moraine when what you want is really a hot one at night.
And it stirs a little of the faith of your fathers that is deep
down within yon to have to have it taken for granted that
you are an Episcopalian, when really you are an old-
fashioned Philadelphia Quaker.
But these things have to be done; it is the cock that the
whole of this society owes to Aesulapius.
And the odd, queer thin;* is that the whole collection of
rules applies to anybody — to the anybodies that you meet in
hotels, in railway trains, to a less degree perhaps in steamers,
but even, in the end, upon steamers.
You meet a man or a woman and, from tiny and intimate
sounds, from the slightest of movements, you know at once
whether you are concerned with good people or with those
who won't do. You know, that is to say, whether they will
go rigidly through with the whole programme, from the
underdone beef to the Anglicanism. It won't matter whether
they be short or tall; whether the voice squeak like a
marionette or rumbles like a town bull's; it won't, for the
matter of that, matter whether they are Germans, Austrians,
French, Spanish, or even Brazilians — they will be the
Germans or Brazilians who take a cold bath every morning
and who move, roughly speaking, in diplomatic circles.
But the in con ven seat— well, hang it all, I will say it — the
damnable nuisence of the whole thing is, that with all the
taking for granted, you never really get an inch deeper than
the things I have catalogued.
I can give you a rather extraordinary instance of this. I
can't remember whether it was in our first year — the first year
of us four at Nauheim, because, of course, it would have been
the fourth year of Florence and myself — but it must have
been In the first or second year. And that gives fbe measure
at once of the extraordinarisess of oar discussion sod of the
swiftness with which intimacy had grown up between us. On
the one hand we seemed to start ont on the expedition so
naturally and with so little preparation, that it was as if we
must have made many such excursions before ; and our
intimacy seemed so deep , , .
Yet the place to which we went was obviously one to which
Florence at least would have wanted to take us quite early,
so that you would almost think we should have gone there
together at the beginning of our intimacy. Florence was
singularly expert as a guide to archeological exceptions, and
there was nothing she liked so much as taking people round
ruins and showing you the window from which someone
looked down upon the murder of someone else. She only did
it once; but she did it quite magnificently. She could find
her way, with the sols help of Baedeker, as easily about any
old monument as she could about any American city where
the blocks were all square and the streets all numbered, so
that you can go perfectly easily from Twenty-Fourth to
Thirtieth.
Now it happens that fifty minutes away from Nauheim,
by a good train, is the ancient city of M , upon a great
pinnacle of basalt, girt with a triple road running sideways
up its shoulder like a scarf. And at the top there is a castle
— not a square castle like Windsor: — but a castle all slate
gables and high peaks, with gilt weathercocks flashing
bravely — the castle of St. Elizabeth of Hungary. It has the
disadvantage of being in Prussia; and it is always disagree-
able to go into that country ; but it is very old, and there
are many daub! expired churches, and it stands up like a
pyramid out of the green valley of the Lahn. I don't suppose
the Ashbnrnbam.s wanted especially to go there, and I didn't
especially want to go there myself. But, you understand,
there was no objection.
(To be continued.)
87
INDISSOLUBLE MATRIMONY
BY
REBECCA WEST.
When George Siiverton opened the front door he found that the house was not
empty for all its darkness. The spitting noise of the striking of damp matches and
mild, growling exclamations of annoyance told him that his wife was trying to light
the dining-room gas. He went in and with some short, hostile sound of greeting
lit a match and brought brightness into the little room. Then, irritated by his own
folly in bringing private papers into his wife's presence, he stuffed the letters he
had brought from the office deep into the pockets of his overcoat. He looked at
her suspiciously, but she had not seen them, being busy in unwinding her orange
motorveil. His eyes remained on her face to brood a little sourly on her moving
loveliness, which he had not been sure of finding : for she was one of those women
who create an illusion alternately of extreme beauty and extreme ugliness. Under
her curious dress, designed in some pitifully cheap and worthless stuff by a successful
mood of her indiscreet taste — she had black blood in her — her long body seemed
pulsing with some exaltation. The blood was coursing violently under her luminous
yellow skin, and her lids, dusky with fatigue, drooped contentedly over her great
humid black eyes. Perpetually she raised her hand to the mass of black hair that
was coiled on her thick golden neck, and stroked it with secretive enjoyment, as
a cat licks its fur. And her large mouth smiled frankly, but abstractedly, at some
digested pleasure.
There was a time when George would have looked on this riot of excited
loveliness with suspicion. But now he knew it was almost certainly caused by
some trifle — a long walk through stinging weather, the report of a Socialist victory
at a by-election, or the intoxication of a waltz refrain floating from the municipal
band-stand across the flats of the local recreation ground. And even if it had been
caused by some amorous interlude he would not have greatly cared. In the ten
years since their marriage he had lost the quality which would have made him
resentful. He now believed that quality to be purely physical. Unless one was
in good condition and responsive to the messages sent out by the flesh Evadne
could hardly concern one. He turned the bitter thought over in his heart and
stung himself by deliberately gazing unmoved upon her beautiful joyful body.
" Let's have supper now! " she said rather greedily.
He looked at the table and saw she had set it before she went out. As usual
she had Been in an improvident hurry : it was carelessly done. Besides, whaft an
98
absurd supper to set before a hungry solicitor's clerk! In the centre, obviously
Jatended as the principal dish, was a bowl of plums, softly red, soaked with the
sun, glowing like jewels in the downward stream of the incandescent light. Besides
them was a great yellow melon, its sleek sides fluted with rich growth, and a honey*
comb glistening on a willow-pattern dish. The only sensible food to be seen was
a plate of tongue laid at his place.
" I can't sit down to supper without washing my hands I ''
While he splashed in the bathroom upstairs he heard her pull in a chair to
the table and sit down to her supper. It annoyed him. There was no ritual about
it. While he was eating the tongue she would be crushing honey on new bread,
or stripping a plum of its purple skin and holding the golden globe up to the gas
to see the light filter through. The meal would pass in silence. She would
innocently take his dumbness for a sign of abstraction and forbear to babble. He
would find the words choked on his lips by the weight of dullness that always
oppressed him in her presence. Then, just about the time when he was beginning
to feel able to formulate his obscure grievances against her, she would rise from
the table without a word and run upstairs to her work, humming in that uncanny,
negro way of hers.
And so it was. She ate with an appalling catholicity of taste, with a nice
child's love of sweet foods, and occasionally she broke into that hoarse beautiful
croon. Every now and then she looked at him with too obvious speculations as
to whether his silence was due to weariness or uncertain temper. Timidly she cut
him an enormous slice of the melon, which he did not want. Then she rose abruptly
and flung herself into the rocking chair on the hearth. She clasped her hands behind
her head and strained backwards so that the muslin stretched over her strong breasts.
She sang saftly to the ceiling.
There was something about the fantastic figure that made him feel as though
they were not properly married.
•* Evadne? "
" *S?"
** What have you been up to this evening? "
" I was at Milly Stafordale's."
He was silent again. That name brought up the memory of his courting days.
It was under the benign eyes of blonde, plebeian Milly that he had wooed the
distracting creature in the rocking chair.
Ten years before, when he was twenty-five, his firm had been reduced to
hysteria over the estates of an extraordinarily stupid old woman, named Mrs, Mary
Ellerker. Her stupidity, grappling with the complexity of the sources of the vast
income which rushed in spate from the properties ©I four deceased husbands,
demanded oceans of explanations even oyer her weekly rents. SHverton alone in
the office, by reason oi a certain natural incapacity for excitement, could deal calmly
with this marvel of imbecility. He alone could endure to sit with patience in the
black*panelled drawing room amidst the jungle of shiny mahogany furniture and
talk to a mass of darkness, who rested heavily in the window=seat and now and then
made an idiotic remark in a bright, hearty voice. But it shook even him. Mrs.
Mary Ellerlter was obscene. Yet she was perfectly sane and, although of that
remarkable plainness noticeable in most oft*married women, in good enough physical
condition. She merely presented the loathsome spectacle of an ignorant mind,
contorted by the artificial idiocy of coquetry, lack of responsibility, and hatred of
discipline, stripped naked by old age. That was the real horror of her. One
feared to think how many women were really like Mrs. Ellerker under their armour
of physical perfection or social grace. For this reason he turned eyes of hate on
Mrs. Ellerker' s pretty little companion, Milly Stafordale, who smiled at him over
her embroidery with wintry northern brightness. When she was old she too would
be obscene.
This horror ohssessed him. Never before had he feared anything. lie had
never lived more than half=an=hour from a police station, and, as he had by some
chance missed the melancholy clairvoyance of adolescence, he had never conceived
of any horror with which the police could not deal. This disgust of women revealed
to him that the world is a place of subtle perils. He began to fear marriage as he
feared death. The thought of intimacy with some lovely, desirable and necessary
wife turned him sick as he sat at his lunch. The secret obscenity of women! He
talked darkly of it to his friends. He wondered why the Church did not provide
a service for the absolution of men after marriage. Wife desertion seemed to him
a beautiful return of the tainted body to cleanliness.
On his fifth visit to Mrs. Ellerker he could not begin his business at once.
One of Milly Stafordale's friends had come m to sing to the old lady. She stood
by the piano against the light, so that he saw her washed with darkness. Amazed,
of tropical fruit. And before he had time to apprehend the sleepy wonder of her
beauty, she had begun to sing. Now he knew that her voice was a purely physical
attribute, built in her as she lay in her mother's womb, and no index of her spiritual
values. But then, as it welled up from the thick golden throat and clung to her
lips, it seemed a sublime achievement of the soul. It was smouldering contralto
such as only those of black blood can possess. As she sang her great black eyes
lay on him with the innocent shamelessness of a young animal, and he remembered
hopefully that he was good looking. Suddenly she stood in silence, playing with
her heavy black plait. Mrs. Ellerker broke into silly thanks. The girl's mother,
who had been playing the accompaniment, rose and stood rolling up her music.
Silverton, sick with excitement, was introduced to them. He noticed that the
mother was a little darker than the conventions permit. fTheir name was Hannan—
Mrs. Arthur Hannan and Evadne. They moved lithely and quietly out of the room,
the girl's eyes stilt lingering on his face.
100
Tfee thought of her splendour and the rolling echoes of her voice disturbed him
all night. Next day, going to his office, he travelled with her on the horse-car that
bound his suburb to Petrick. One of the horses fell lame, and she had time to
tell him that she was studying at a commercial college. He quivered with distress.
AH the time he had a dizzy illusion that she was nestling up against him. They
parted shyly. During the next few days they met constantly. He began to go
and see them in the evening at their home — a mean flat crowded with cheap glories
of bead curtains and Oriental hangings that set off the women's alien beauty. Mrs.
Hannan was a widow and they lived alone, in a wonderful silence. He talked more
than he had ever done in his whole life before. He took a dislike to the widow, she
was consumed with fiery subterranean passions, no fit guardian for the tender girl.
Now he could imagine with what silent rapture Evadne had watched his
agitation. Almost from the first she had meant to marry him. He was physically
attractive, though not strong. His intellect was gently stimulating like a mild
white wine. And it was time she married. She was ripe for adult things. This
was the real wound in his soul. He had tasted of a divine thing created in his time
for dreams out of her rich beauty, her loneliness, her romantic poverty, her
immaculate youth. He had known love. And Evadne had never known anything
more than a magnificent physical adventure which she had secured at the right time
as she would have engaged a cab to take her to the station in time for the cheapest
excursion train. It was a quick way to light-hearted living. With loathing he
remembered how in the days of their engagement she used to gaze purely into his
blinking eyes and with her unashamed kisses incite him to extravagant embraces.
Now he cursed her for having obtained his spiritual revolution on false pretences.
Only for a little time had he had his illusion, for their marriage was hastened by
Mrs. Hannan's sudden death. After three months of savage mourning Evadne
flung herself into marriage, and her excited candour had enlightened him very soon.
That marriage had lasted ten years. And to Evadne their relationship was
just the same as ever. Her vitality needed him as it needed the fruit on the table
before him. He shook with wrath and a sense of outraged decency.
*' O George I " She was yawning widely.
" What's the matter ? " he said without interest.
" It's so beastly dull."
'* I can't help that, can I ? "
" No." She smiled placidly at him. " We're a couple of dull dogs, aren't
we ? I wish we had children."
After a minute she suggested, apparently as an alternative amusement,
** Perhaps the post hasn't passed."
101
As she spoke there was a rat-tat and the slither of a letter under the door.
Evadne picked herself up and ran out Into the lobby. After a second or two, during
which she made irritating inarticulate exclamations, she came in reading the letter
and stroking her bust with a gesture of satisfaction.
" They want me to speak at Longton's meeting on the nineteenth," she purred.
** Longton? What's he up to? "
Stephen Longton was the owner of the biggest iron works in Petrick, a man
whose refusal to adopt the livery of busy oafishness thought proper to commercial
men aroused the gravest suspicions.
" He's standing as Socialist candidate for the town council."
"... Socialist! " he muttered.
He set his jaw. That was a side of Evadne he considered as little as possible.
He had never been able to assimilate the fact that Evadne had, two years after
their marriage, passed through his own orthodox Radicalism to a passionate
Socialism, and that after reading enormously of economics she had begun to write
for the Socialist press and to speak successfully at meetings. In the jaundiced
recesses of his mind he took it for granted that her work would have the lax fibre
of her character : that it would be infected with her Oriental crudities. Although
once or twice he had been congratulated on her brilliance, he mistrusted this phase
if her activity as a caper of the sensualist. His eyes blazed on her and found the
depraved, oversexed creature, looking milder than a gazeller, holding out a hand=
bill to him.
" They've taken it for grantedl "
He saw her name — his name —
MRS. EVADNE SILVERTON.
It was at first the blaze of stout scarlet letters on the dazzling white ground
that made him blink. Then he was convulsed with rage,
" Georgie dear] "
She stepped forward and caught his weak body to her bosom. He wrenched
himself away. Spiritual nausea made him determined to be a better man than her.
" A pair of you ! You and Longton — 1" he snarled scornfully. Then,
seeing her startled face, he controlled himself.
** 1 thought it would please you," said Evadne, a little waspishly.
" You mustn't have anything to do with Longton," he stormed.
ioa
A change passed over her. She became ugly. Her face was heavy with
intellect, her lips coarse with power. He was at arms with a Socialist lead. Much
he would have preferred the bland sensualist again.
" Why ? »*
.'* Because — his lips stuck together like blotting-paper — he's not the sort of
man my wife should— should— "
With movements which terrified him by their rough energy, she folded up the
bills and put them back in the envelope.
" George. I suppose you mean that he's a bad man." He nodded.
" I know quite well that the girl who used to be his typist is his mistress."
She spoke it sweetly, as if reasoning with an old fool. " But she's got consumption.
She'll be dead in six months. In fact, I think it's rather nice of Mm. To look
after her and all that."
" My Godl He leapt to his feet, extending a shaking forefinger. As she
turned to hira, the smile dying on her lips, his excited weakness wrapped him in
a paramnesic illusion : it seemed to him that he had been through all this before —
a long, long time ago. " My God, you talk like a woman off the streets I "
Evadne's lips lifted over her strong teeth. With clever cruelty she fixed his
eyes with hers, well knowing that he longed to fall forward and bury his head on
the table in a transport of hysterical sobs. After a moment of this torture she turned
away, herself distressed by a desire to cry.
" How can you say such dreadful, dreadful things! " she protested, chokingly.
He sat down again. His eyes looked little and red, but they blazed on her.
*' I wonder if you are," he said softly.
" Are what? " she asked petulantly, a tear rolling down her nose.
** You know," he answered, nodding.
" George, George, Georgel" she cried.
" You've always been keen on kissing and making love, haven't you, my
precious? At first you startled ms, you did! I didn't know women were like
that." From that morass he suddenly stepped on to a high peak of terror. Amazed
to find himself sincere, he cried — " 1 don't believe good women are! '*
" Georgie, how can you be so silly! exclaimed Evadne shrilly. " You know
quite well I've been as true to you as any woman could be." She sought his eyes
with a liquid glance of reproach. He averted his gaze, sickened at having put
himself in the wrong. For even while he degraded his tongue his pure soul fainted
with loathing of her fleshliness.
103
I— I'm sorry,
t»
Too wily to forgive him at once, she showed him a lowering profile with down*
cast lids. Of course, he knew it was a fraud ; an imputation against her chastity
was no more poignant than a reflection on the cleanliness of her nails—rude and
spiteful, but that was all. But for a time they kept up the deception, while she
cleared the table in a steely silence.
" Evadne, I'm sorry. I'm tired." His throat was dry. He could not bear
the discord of a row added to the horror of their companionship. " Evadne, do
forgive me — I don't know what I meant by — "
** That's all right, silly ! " she said suddenly and bent over the table to kiss
him. Her brow was smooth. It was evident from her splendid expression that she
was preoccupied. Then she finished clearing up the dishes and took them into
the kitchen. While she was out of the room he rose from his seat and sat down
in the armchair by the fire, setting his bulldog pipe alight. For a very short time
he was free of her voluptuous presence. But she ran back soon, having put the
kettle on and changed her blouse for a loose dressings acket, and sat down on the
ftrm of his chair. Once or twice she bent and kissed his brow, but for the most
part she lay back with his head drawn to her bosom, rocking herself rhythmically.
Silverton, a little disgusted by their contact, sat quite motionless and passed into a
doze. He revolved in his mind the incidents of his day's routine and remembered
a snub from a superior. So he opened his eyes and tried to think of something else.
It was then that he became conscious that the rhythm of Evadne's movement was
not regular. It was broken as though she rocked in time to music. Music? His
sense of hearing crept up to hear if there was any sound of music in the breaths she
was emitting rather heavily every now and now and then. At first he could hear
nothing. Then it struck him that each breath was a muttered phrase. He stiffened,
and hatred flamed through his veins. The words came clearly through her
lips. ..." The present system of wage-slavery . . ."
" Evadne 1 " He sprang to his feet. *' You're preparing your speech ! "
She did not move. " I am," she said.
" Damn it, you shan't speak 1 "
" Damn it, I will 1"
" Evadne, you shan't speak ! If you do I swear to God above 1*11 turn you
out into the streets — ." She rose and came towards him. She looked black and
dangerous. She trod softly like a cat with her head down. In spHe of himself, his
tongue licked his lips in fear and he cowered a moment before he picked up a knife
from the table. For a space she looked down on him and the sharp blade,
*' You idiot, can't you hear the kettle's boiling over? "
He shrank back, letting the knife fall on the floor, For three minutes he stood
104
thro controlling Us breath and trying to still his heart. Then he followed her Into
the kitchen. She was making a noise with a basinful of dishes.
" Stop that row."
She turned round with a dripping dish-cloth in her hand and pondered whether
to throw it at him. But she was tired and wanted peace : so that she could finish
the rough draft of her speech. So she stood waiting.
" Did you understand what I said then? If you don't promise me heTe and
now— "
She flung her arms upwards with a cry and dashed past him. He made to run
after her upstairs, but stumbled on the threshold of the lobby and sat with his ankle
twisted under him, shaking with rage. In a second she ran downstairs again, clothed
in a big cloak with black bundle clutched to her breast. For the first time in their
married life she was seized with a convulsion of sobs. She dashed out of the front
door and banged it with such passion that a glass pane shivered to fragments
behind her.
t*
What's this? What's this? " he cried stupidly, standing up. He perceived
with an insane certainty that she was going out to meet some unknown lover. " I'll
come and tell him what a slut you are! " he shouted after her and stumbled to the
door. It was jammed now and he had to drag at it.
The night was flooded with the yellow moonshine of midsummer: it seemed to
drip from the lacquered leaves of the shrubs in the front garden. In its soft clarity
he could see her plainly, although she was now two hundred yards away. She was
hastening to the north end of Sumatra Crescent, an end that curled up the hill
like a silly kitten's tail and stopped abruptly in green Belds. So he knew that she
was going to the young man who had just bought the Georgian Manor, whose elm-
trees crowned the hill. Oh, how he hated her ! Yet he must follow her, or else
she would cover up her adulteries so that he could not take his legal revenge. So
he began to run — silently, for he wore his carpet slippers. He was only a hundred
yards behind her when she slipped through 3 gap in the hedge to tread a field path.
She still walked with pride, for though she was town bred, night in the open seemed
not at all fearful to her. As he shuffled in pursuit his carpet slippers were engulfed
in a shining pool of mud : he raised one with a squelch, the other was left. This
seemed the last humiliation. lie kicked the other one off his feet and padded on in
his socks, snuffling in anticipating of a cold. Then physical pain sent him back to
the puddle to pluck out the slippers ; it was a dirty job. His heart battered his
breast as he saw that Evadne had gained the furthest hedge and was crossing the
stile into the lane that ran up to the Manor gates.
" Go on, you beast! " he muttered, " Go on, go on! " After a scamper he
climbed the stile and thrust his lean neck beyond a mass of wilted hawthorn bloom
that crumbled into vagrant petals at his touch.
105
The lane mounted yellow as cheese to where the moon lay on bis iron tracery
of. the Manor gates. Evadne was not there. Hardly believing his eyes he hobbled
over into the lane and looked in the other direction. There he saw her disappearing
round the bend o! the road. Gathering himself up to a run, he tried to think out
his bearings. He had seldom passed this way, and like most people without strong
primitive instincts he had no sense o! orientation. With difficulty he remembered
that after a mile's mazy wanderings between high hedges this lane sloped suddenly
to the bowl of heather overhung by the moorlands, in which lay the Petrick reservoirs,
two untamed lakes.
" Ehl she's going to meet him by the waterl " he cursed to himself. He
remembered the withered ash tree, seared by lightning to its root, that stood by the
road At the bare frontier of the moor. " May God strike her like that," he prayed,"
" as she fouls the other man's lips with her kisses. O God! let me strangle her.
Or bury a knife deep in her breast." Suddenly he broke into a lolloping run. "
my Lord, I'll be able to divorce her, I'll be free. Free to live alone. To do
my day's work and sleep my night's sleep without her. I'll get a job somewhere
else and forget her. I'll bring her to the dogs. No clean man or woman in Petrick
will look at her now. They won't have her to speak at that meeting now! " His
throat swelled with joy, he leapt high in the air.
"I'll lie about her, If I can prove that she's wrong with this man they'll
believe me if I say she's a bad woman and drinks. < I'll make her name a joke.
And then — "
He 0ung wide his arms in ecstasy : the left struck against stone. More pain
than he had thought his body could hold convulsed him, so that he sank on the
ground hugging his aching arm. He looked backwards as he writhed and saw that
the hedge had stopped ; above him was the great stone wall of the county asylum.
The question broke on him — was there any lunatic in its confines so slavered with
madness as he himself? Nothing but madness could have accounted for the torrent
of ugly words, the sea of uglier thoughts that was now a part of him. " God,
me to turn like this! " he cried, rolling over fulMength on the grassy bank by the
roadside. That the infidelity of his wife, a thing that should have brought out the
stern manliness of his true nature, should have discovered him as lecherous*!lpped
as any pot-house lounger, was the most infamous accident of his married life. The
sense of sin descended on him so that his tears Sowed hot and bitterly. " Have I
gone to the Unitarian chapel every Sunday morning and to the Ethical Society every
evening for nothing? " his spirit asked itself in its travail. " All those Browning
lectures for nothing . . ." He said the Lord's Prayer several times and lay
for a minute quietly crying. The relaxation of his muscles brought him a sense of
nst which seemed forgiveness falling from God. The tears dried on his cheeks.
His calmer consciousness heard the sound of rushing waters mingled with the beating
of blood in his ears, He got up and scrambled round the turn of the road that
brought him to the withered ash-tree.
Re walked forward on the parched heatherland to the mound whose scarred
106
sides, heaped with boulders, totted wHh mountain grasses, shone before him In th*
moonlight. He scrambled up to H hurriedly and Hoisted himself from ledge to ledge
till he fell on his knees with a squeal of pain. His ankle was caught in a crevice
of the rock. Gulping down his agony at this final physical humiliation he heaved
himself upright and raced on to the summit, and found himself before the Devil's
Cauldron, filled to the brim with yellow moonshine and the fiery play of summer
lightning. (The rugged crags opposite him were a low barricade against the stars
to which the mound where he stood shot forward like a bridge. To the left of this
the long Lisbech pond lay like a trailing serpent; its silver scales glittered as the
wind swept down from the vaster moorlands to the east. To the right under a steep
drop of twenty feet was the Whlmsey pond, more sinister, shaped in an unnatural
oval, sheltered from the wind by the high ridge so that the undisturbed moonlight
lay across it like a sharp-edged sword.
He looked about for some sign of Evadne. She could not be on the land by
the margin of the lakes, for the light blazed so strongly that each reed could be
clearly seen like a black dagger stabbing the silver. He looked down Lisbech and
saw far east a knot of red and green and orange lights. Perhaps for some devilish
purpose Evadne had sought Lisbech railway station. But his volcanic mind had
preserved one grain of sense that assured him that, subtle as Evadne's villainy might
be, it would not lead her to walk five miles out of her way to a terminus which she
could have reached in fifteen minutes by taking a train from the station down the
road. She must be under cover somewhere here. He west down the gentle slope
that fell from the top of the ridge to Lisbech pond in a disorder of rough heather,
unhappy patches of cultivated grass, and coppices of silver birch, fringed with flaming
broom that seemed faintly tarnished in the moonlight. At the bottom was a roughly
hewn path which he followed in hot aimless hurry. In a little he approached a riot
of falling waters. There was a slice ten feet broad carved out of the ridge, and to
this narrow channel of black shining rock the floods of Lisbech leapt some feet and
raced through to Whimsey. The noise beat him back. The gap was spanned by
a gaunt thing of paint- blistered iron, on which he stood dizzily and noticed how the
wide step that ran on each side of the channel through to the other pond was smeared
with sinister green slime. Now his physical distress reminded him of Evadne, whom
he had almost forgotten in contemplation of these lonely waters. The idea of her
had been present but obscured, as sometimes toothache may cease active torture.
His blood lust set him on and he staggered forward with covered ears. Even as
he went something caught his eye in a thicket high up on the slope near the crags.
Against the slender pride of some silver birches stood a gnarled hawthorn tree, its
branches flattened under the stern moorland winds so that it grew squat like an
opened umbrella. In its dark shadows, faintly illumined by a few boughs of withered
blossom, there moved a strange bluish light. Even while he did not know what H
was it made his flesh stir.
The light emerged. It was the moonlight reflected from Evadne's body. She
was clad in a black bathing dress, and her arms and legs and the broad streak of
flesh laid bare by a rent down the back shone brilliantly white, so that she seemed
107
like a grotesquely patterned wild animal as she ran down to the lake. Whirling Her
arms above her head she trampled down into the water and struck out strongly.
Her movements were lull of brisk delight and she swam quickly. The moonlight
made her the centre of a little feathery blur of black and silver, with a comet's tail
trailing in her wake.
Nothing in all his married life had ever staggered Silverton so much as this.
He had imagined his wife's adultery so strongly that it had come to be. It was now
as real as their marriage ; more real than their courtship. So this seemed to he the
last crime of the adulteress. She had dragged him over those squelching fields and
these rough moors and changed him from a man of irritations, bnt no passions, into
a cold designer of murderous treacheries, so that he might witness a swimming
exhibition! For a minute he was stunned. Then he sprang down to the rushy edge
and ran along in the direction of her course, crying — " Evadne! Evadnel " She
did not hear him. At last he achieved a chest note and shouted — " Evadne! come
here!" The black and silver feather shivered in mid*water. She turned
immediately and swam back to shore. He suspected sullenness in her slowness,
but was glad of it, for after the shock of this extraordinary incident he wanted to go
to sleep. Drowsiness lay on him like lead. He shook himself like a dog and
wrenched off his linen collar, winking at the bright moon to keep himself awake.
As she came quite near he was exasperated by the happy, snorting breaths she drew,
and strolled a pace or two up the bank. To his enragement the face she lifted as
she waded to dry land was placid, and she scrambled gaily up the bank to his side.
" O George, why did you come! " she exclaimed quite affectionately, laying a
damp hand on his shoulder.
" O damn it, what does this meant " he cried, committing a horrid tenor squeak.
" What are you doing? "
" Why, George," she said," " I came here for a bathe."
He stared into her face and could make nothing of it. It was only sweet surfaces
of flesh, soft radiances of eye and lip, a lovely lie of comeliness. He forgot this
present grievance in a cold search for the source of her peculiar hatefulness. Under
this sick gaze she pouted and turned away with a peevish gesture. He made no sign
and stood silent, watching her saunter to that gaunt iron bridge. The roar of the
little waterfall did not disturb her splendid nerves and she drooped sensuously over
the hand rail, sniffing up the sweet night smell ; too evidently trying to abase him
to another apology.
A mosquito Whirred into his face. He killed it viciously and strode off towards
his wife, who showed by a common little toss of the head that she was conscious oft
his coming.
** Look here, Evadne! " he panted. " What did you come here for? Tell me
the truth and I promise Til not— I'll not— "
** Not WHAT, George? "
103
11 please, please tell me the troth, do Evadnel " he cried pitifully.
" But, dear, what is there to carry on about so? You went on so queer!) about
my meeting that my head felt fit to split, and I thought the long walk and the dip
would do me good." She broke off, amazed at the wave of horror that passed over
his face.
His heart sank. From the loose dipped hurry in the telling of her story, from
the bigness of her eyes and the lack of subtlety in her voice, he knew that this was
the $ruth. Here was no adulteress whom he could accuse in the law courts and
condemn into the street, no resourceful sinner whose merry crimes he could discover.
Here was merely his good wife, the faithful attendant of his hearth, relentless wrecker
of his soul.
She came towards him as a cat approaches a displeased master, and hovered
about him on the stone coping of the noisy sluice.
" Indeed! " he found himself saying sarcastically. " Indeed! "
14 Yes, George Silverton, indeed! " she burst out, a little frightened. " And
why shouldn't I? I used to come here often enough on summer nights with poor
Mamma — "
" Yesl " he shouted. It was exactly the sort of thing that would appeal to that
weird half-black woman from the back of beyond. ' " Mamma! " he cried tauntingly,
" Mamma! "
There was a flash of silence between them before Evadne, clutching her breast
and balancing herself dangerously on her heels on the stone coping, broke into gentle
shrieks. " You dare talk of my Mamma, my poor Mamma, and she cold in heti
igrave! I haven't been happy since she died and I married you, you silly little
misery, you! " Then the rage was suddenly wiped off her brain by the perception
of a crisis.
The trickle of silence overflowed into a lake, over which their spirits flew,
looking at each other's reflection in the calm waters : in the hurry of their flight they
had never before seen each other. They stood facing one another with dropped
heads, quietly thinking,
The strong passion which filled them threatened to disintegrate their souls as
a magnetic current decomposes the electrolyte, so they fought to organise their
sensations. They tried to arrange themselves and their lives for comprehension,
but beyond sudden lyric visions of old incidents of hatefulness — such as a smarting
quarrel of six years ago as to whether Evadne had or had not cheated the railway
company out of one and eightpence on an excursion ticket — the past was intangible.
It trailed behind this intense event as the pale hair trails behind the burning comet.
They were pre occupied with the moment. Quite often George had found a mean
pleasure in the thought that by never giving Evadne a child he had cheated her
out of one form of experience, end now he paid the price for this unnatural pride of
109
sterility. For now the spiritual offspring of their intercourse came to birth. A
sublime loathing was between them. For a little time it was a huge perilous horror,
but afterwards, like men aboard a ship whose masts seek the sky through steep waves,
they found a drunken pride in the adventure. This was the very absolute of hatred.
It cheapened the memory of the fantasias of irritation and ill=will they had performed
in the less boring moments of their marriage, and they felt dazed, as amateurs who
had found themselves creating a masterpiece. For the first time they were possessed
by a supreme emotion and they felt a glad desire to strip away, restraint and express
it nakedly. It was ecstasy ; they felt tall and full of blood.
Like people who, bewitched by Christ, see the whole earth as the breathing body
of God, so they saw the universe as the substance and the symbol of their hatred.
The stars trembled overhead with wrath. A wind from behind the angry crags set
the moonlight on Lisbech quivering with rage, and the squat hawthorntree creaked
slowly like the irritation of a dull little man. The dry moors, parched with harsh
anger, waited thirstily and, sending out the murmur of rustling mountain grass and
the cry of wakening fowl , seemed to huddle closer to the lake . But this sense of the
earth's sympathy slipped away from them and they loathed all matter as the dull
wrapping of their flame- like passion. At their wishing matter fell away and they
saw sarcastic visions. He saw her as a toad squatting on the clean earth, obscuring
the stars and pressing down its hot moist body on the cheerful fields. She felt his
long boneless body coiled round the roots of the lovely tree of life. They shivered
fastidiously. With an uplifting sense of responsibility they realised that they must
kill each other.
A bird rose over their heads with a leaping flight that made it seem as though
Its black body was bouncing against the bright sky. The foolish noise and motion
precipitated their thoughts. They were broken into a new conception of life. They
perceived that God is war and his creatures are meant to fight. When dogs walk
through the world cats must climb trees. The virgin must snare the wanton, the
fine lover must put the prude to the sword. The gross man of action walks, spurred
on the bloodless bodies of the men of thought, who lie quiet and cunningly do not tell
him where his grossness leads him. The flesh must smother the spirit, the spirit
must wt the flesh on fire and watch it burn. And those who were gentle by nature
and shrank from the ordained brutality were betrayers of their kind, surrendering
the earth to the seed of their enemies. In this war there is no discharge. II they
succumbed to peace now, the rest of their lives would be dishonourable, like the
exile of a rebel who has begged his life as the reward of cowardice. It was their
first experience of religious passion, and they abandoned themselves to it so that
their immediate personal qualities fell away from them. Neither his weakness nor
her prudence stood in the way of the event.
They measured each other with the eye. To her he was a spidery thing against
the velvet blackness and hard silver surfaces of the pond. The light soaked her
bathing dress so that she seemed, against the jagged shadows of the rock cutting, as
though she were clad in a garment of dark polished mail. Her knees were bent
so clearly, her toes gripped the coping so strongly. He understood very dearly that
110
if he did not kill her instantly she would drop him easily into the deep riot of waters.
Yet for a space he could not move, hut stood expecting a degrading death. Indeed,
he gave her time to kill hint. But she was without power too, and struggled weakly
with a hallucination. The quarrel in Sumatra Crescent with its suggestion of vast
and unmentionable antagonisms ; her swift race through the moon-drenched
countryside, all crepitant with night noises : the swimming in the wine-like lake j
their isolation on the moor, which was expressed!}- hostile to them, as nature always
is to lonely man : and this stark contest face to face, with their resentments heaped
between them like a pile of naked swords — these things were so strange that her
civilised self shrank back appalled. There entered into her the primitive woman
who is the curse of all women : a creature of the most utter femaleness, useless, save
for childbirth, with no strong brain to make her physical weakness a light accident,
abjectly and corruptingly afraid of man, A squaw, she dared not strike her lord.
The illusion passed like a moment of faintness and left her enraged at having
forgotten her superiority even for an instant. In the material world she had a
thousand times been defeated into making prudent reservations and practising
unnatural docilities. But in the world of thought she had maintained unfalteringly
her masterfulness in spite of the strong yearning of her temperament towards
voluptuous surrenders. That was her virtue. Its violation whipped her to action
and she would have killed him at once, had not his moment come a second before
hers. Sweating horribly, he had dropped his head forward on his chest : his eyes
fell on her feet and marked the plebeian moulding of her ankle, which rose thickly
over a crease of Sesh from the heel to the calf. The woman was coarse in grain and
pattern.
He had no instinct for honourable attack, so he found himself striking her in
the stomach. She reeled from pain, not because his strength overcame hers. For
the first time her eyes looked into his candidly open, unveiled by languor or lust :
their hard brightness told him how she despised him for that unwarlike blow. He
cried out as he realised that this was another of her despicable victories and that the
whole burden of the crime now lay on him, for he had begun it. But the rage was
stopped on his lips as her arms, flung wildly out as she fell backwards, caught him
about the waist with abominable justness of eye and evil intention. So they fell
body to body into the quarrelling waters.
The feathery confusion had looked so soft, yet it seemed the solid rock they
struck. The breath shot out of him and suffocation warmly stuffed his ears and
nose. Then the rock cleft and he was swallowed by a brawling blackness in which
whirled a vortex that Sung him again and again on a sharp thing that burned his
shoulder. AH about him fought the waters, and they cut his flesh like knives. His
pain was past belief. Though God might be war, he desired peace in his time,
and he yearned for another God — a child's God, an immense arm coming down from
the hills and lifting him to a kindly bosom. Soon his body would burst for breath,
his agony would smash in his breast bone. So great was his pain that his conscious-
ness was strained to apprehend it, as a too tightly stretched canvas splits and rips.
Ill
Suddenly the air was sweet on his month. The starlight seemed as hearty as
a cheer. The world was still there, the world in which he had lived, so he must
be sale. His own weakness and loveableness induced enjoyable tears, and there was
a delicious moment of abandonment to comfortable whining before he realised that
the water would not kindly buoy him up for long, and that even now a hostile current
clasped his waist. He braced his flaccid body against the sucking blackness and
flung his head back so that the water should not bubble so hungrily against the
cords of his throat. Above him the slime of the rock was sticky with moonbeams,
and the leprous light brought to his mind a newspaper paragraph, read years ago,
which told him that the dawn had discovered floating in some oily Mersey dock,
under walls as infected with wet growth as this, a corpse whose blood-encrusted
finger-tips were deeply cleft. On the instant bis own finger-tips seemed hot with
blood and deeply cleft from clawing at the impregnable rock. He screamed
gaspingly and beat his hands through the strangling flood. Action, which he had
always loathed and dreaded, had broken the hard mould of his self-possession, and
the dry dust of his character was blown hither and thither by fear. But one sharp
fragment of intelligence which survived this detrition of his personality perceived
that a certain gleam on the rock about a foot above the water was not the cold
putrescence of the slime, but certainly the hard and merry light of a moon-ray
striking on solid metal. His left hand clutched upwards at it, and he swung from
a rounded projection. It was, his touch told him, a leaden ring hanging obliquely
from the rock, to which his memory could visualise precisely in some past drier time
when Lisbech sent no flood to Whimsey, a waterman mooring a boat strewn with
pale-bellied perch. And behind the stooping waterman he remembered a flight of
narrow steps that led up a buttress to a stone shelf that ran through the cutting.
Unquestionably he was safe. He swung in a happy rhythm from the ring, his limp
body trailing like a caterpillar through the stream to the foot of the "steps, while he
gasped in strength. A part of him was in agony, for his arm was nearly dragged
out of its socket and a part of him was embarrassed because his hysteria shook him
with a deep rumbling chuckle that sounded as though he meditated on some
unseemly joke ; the whole was pervaded by a twilight atmosphere of unenthusiastic
gratitude for his rescue, like the quietly cheerful tone of a Sunday evening sacred/
concert. After a minute's deep breathing he hauled himself up by the other hand
and prepared to swing himself on to the steps.
But first, to shake off the wet worsted rags, once his socks, that now stuck
uncomfortably between bis toes, he splashed his feet outwards to midstream. A
certain porpoise- like surface met his left foot. Fear dappled his face with goose
flesh. Without turning his head he knew what it was. It was Evadne's fat flesh
rising on each side of her deep*furrowed spine through the rent in her bathing dress.
Once more hatred marched through his soul like a king : compelling service
by his godhead and, like all gods, a little hated for his harsh lieu on his worshipper.
He saw his wife as the curtain of flesh between him and celibacy, and solitude and
all those delicate abstentions from life which his soul desired. He saw her as the
invisible worm destroying the rose of the world with her dark secret love. Now
112
lie toaelt on ike lowest stone step watching her wet seaWmooth head bobbing nearer
on the waters. As her strong arms, covered with little dark points where her thick
hairs were clotted with moisture, stretched out towards safety he bent forward and
laid his hands on her head. He held her face under water. Scornfully he noticed
the bubbles that rose to the surface from her protesting mouth and nostrils, and the
foam raised by her arms and her thick ankles. To the end the creature persisted
in turmoil, in movement, in action. . . .
She dropped like a stone. His hands, with nothing to resist them, slapped the
water foolishly and he nearly overbalanced forward into the steam. He rose to his
feet very stiffly. " I must be a very strong man," he said, as he slowly climbed
the steps, " I must be a very strong man," he repeated, a little louder, as with a
hot and painful rigidity of the joints he stretched himself out at full length along the
stone shelf. Weakness closed him in like a lead coffin. For a little time the wet=
ness of his clothes persisted in being felt : then the sensation oozed out of him and
Mis body fell out of knowledge. There was neither pain nor joy nor any other
reckless ploughing of the brain by nerves. He knew unconsciousness, or rather the
fullest consciousness he had ever known. For the world became nothingness, and
nothingness which is free from the yeasty nuisance of matter and the ugliness of
generation was the law of his being. He was absorbed into vacuity, the untamed
substance of the universe, round which he conceived passion and thought to circle
as straws caught up by the wind. He saw God and lived.
In Heaven a thousand years are a day. And this little corner of time in which
he found happiness shrank to a nut shell as he opened his eyes again. This peace
was hardly printed on his heart, yet the brightness of the night was blurred by the
dawn. With the grunting carefulness of a man drunk with fatigue, he crawled
along the stone shelf to the iron bridge, where he stood with his back to the roaring
sluice and rested. All things seemed different now and happier. Like most timid
people he disliked the night, and the commonplace hand which the dawn laid on the
scene seemed to him a sanctihcation. The dimmed moon sank to her setting behind
the crags. The jewel lights of Lisbech railway station were weak, cheerful
twinklings. A steaming bluish milk of morning mist had been spilt on the hard
silver surface of the lake, and the reeds no longer stabbed it like little daggers,
but seemed a feathery fringe, like the pampas grass in the front garden in Sumatra
Crescent. The black crags became brownish, and the mist disguised the sternness
of the moor. This weakening of effects was exactly what he had always thought the
extinction of Evadne would bring the world. He smiled happily at the moon.
Yet he was moved to sudden angry speech. " If I had my time over again,"
he said, " I wouldn't touch her with the tongs," For the cold he had known al!
along he would catch had settled in his head, and his handkerchief was wet through.
He leaned over the bridge and looked along Lisbech and thought of Evadne.
For the first time for many years he saw her image without spirits, and wondered
without indignation why she had so often looked like the cat about to steal the
cream. What was the cream? And did she ever steal it? Now he would never
na
know. He thought ol her very generously and sighed over the perversity of fate la
letting so much comeliness.
" If she had married a butcher or a veterinary surgeon she might have been
happy," he said, and shook his head at the glassy black water that slid under the
bridge to that boiling sluice.
A gust of ague reminded him that wet clothes clung to bis fevered body and
that he ought to change as quickly as possible, or expect to laid up for weeks. He
turned along the path that led back across the moor to the withered ash tree, and was
learning the torture of bare feet ou gravel when he cried out to himself : '* I shall be
hanged for killing my wife." It did not come as a trumpet call, for he was one of
those people who never quite hear what is said to them, and this deafishness extended
In him to emotional things. It stole on him clamly, like a fog closing on a city.
When he first felt hemmed in by this certainty he looked over his shoulder to the
crags, remembering tales of how Jacobite fugitives had hidden on the moors for many
weeks. There lay at least another day of freedom. But he was the kind of man
who always goes home. He stumbled on, not very unhappy, except for his feet.
Like many people of weak temperament he did not fear death. Indeed, it had a
peculiar appeal to him ; for while it was important, exciting, it did not, like most
important and exciting things try to create action. He allowed his imagination the
vanity of painting pictures. He saw himself standing in their bedroom, plotting this
last event, with the white sheet and the high lights of the mahongany wardrobe shining
ghostly at him through the darkness. He saw himself raising a thin hand to the gas
bracket and turning on the tap. He saw himself staggering to their bed while death
crept in at his nostrils. He saw his corpse lying in full daylight, and for the first
time knew himself certainly, unquestionably dignified.
He threw back his chest in pride : but at that moment the path stopped and he
found himself staggering down the mound of heatherland and boulders with bleeding
feet. Always he had suffered from sore feet, which had not exactly disgusted but,
worse still, disappointed Evadne. A certain wistfulness she had always evinced
when she found herself the superior animal had enraged and himiliated him many
times. He felt that sting him now, and flung himself down the mound cursing.
When he stumbled up to the withered ash tree he hated her so much that it seemed
as though she were alive again, and a sharp wind blowing down from the moor
terrified him like her touch.
He rested there. Leaning against the stripped grey trunk, he smiled up at the
sky, which was now so touched to ineffectiveness by the dawn that it looked like a tent
of faded silk. There was the peace of weakness in him, which he took to be spiritual,
because it had no apparent physical justification : but he lost it as his dripping clothes
chilled his tired flesh. His discomfort reminded him that the phantasmic night was
passing from him. Daylight threatened him : the daylight In which for so many
years he had worked in the solicitor's office and been snubbed and ignored. " * The
garish day,'" he murmured disgustedly, quoting the blasphemy of some hymn
writer. He wanted his death to happen in this phantasmic night.
114
So he limped hte way along the road. The birds had not yet begun to stag,
but the rustling noises of the night had ceased. The silent highway was consecrated
to his proud progress. He staggered happily like a tired child returning from a
lovely birthday walk : his death in the little bedroom, which for the first time he would
have to himself, was a culminating treat to be gloated over like the promise of a
favourite pudding for supper. As he walked he brooded dozingly on large and
swelling thoughts. Like all people of weak passions and enterprise he loved to
think of Napoleon, and in the shadow of the great asylum wall he strutted a few
steps of his advance from murder to suicide, with arms crossed on his breast and thin
legs trying to strut massively, fie was so happy. He wished that a military band
went before him, and pretended that the high hedges were solemn lines of men,
stricken in awe to silence as their king rode out to some nobly self = chosen doom.
Vast he seemed to himself, and magnificent like music, and solemn like the Sphinx.
He had saved the earth from corruption by killing Evadne, for whom he now felt
the unremorseful pity a conqueror might bestow on a devastated empire. He might
have grieved that his victory brought him death, but with immense pride he found
that the occasion was exactly described by a text. *' He saved others, Himself He
could not save." He had missed the stile in the field above Sumatra Crescent and
had to go back and hunt for it in the hedge. So quickly had his satisfaction borne
him home.
The field had the fantastic air that jerry -builders give to land poised on the
knife-edge of town and country, so that he walked in romance to his very door. The
unmarred grass sloped to a stone*hedge of towers of loose brick, trenches and mounds
of shining clay, and the fine intentful spires of the scaffording round the last un-
finished house. And he looked down on Petrick. Though to the actual eye it was
but a confusion of dark distances through the twilight, a breaking of velvety
perspectives, he saw more intensely than ever before its squalid walls and squalid
homes where mean men and mean women enlaced their unwholesome lives. Yet
he did not shrink from entering for his great experience : as Christ did not shrink
from being born in a stable. He swaggered with humility over the trodden mud of
the field and the new white flags of Sumatra Crescent. Down the road before him
there passed a dim figure, who paused at each lamp post and raised a long wand to
behead the yellow gas flowers that were now wilting before the dawn : a ghostly
herald preparing the world to be his deathbed. The Crescent curved in quiet dark-
Bess, save for one house, where blazed a gas=lit room with undrawn blinds. The
brightness had the startling quality of a scream. He looked in almost anxiously as
he passed, and met the blank eyes of a man in evening clothes who stood by th^
window shaking a medicine. His face was like a wax mask softened by heat : the
features were blurred with the suffering which comes from the spectacle of suffering.
His eyes lay unshiftingly on George's face as he went by and he went on shaking the
bottle. It seemed as though he would never stop.
In the hour of his grandeur George was not forgetful of the griefs of the little
Hunan people, but interceded with God for the sake of this stranger. Everything
was beautiful, beautiful, beautiful.
116
His own little house Hooked solemn as a temple. He leaned against the lamp-
post at the gate and stared at its empty windows and neat bricks. Tae disorder of
the shattered pane of glass could be overlooked by considering a sign that this hoose
was a holy place : like the Passover blood on the lintel. The propriety of the evenly
drawn blind pleased him enormously. He had always known that this was how the
great tragic things of the world had accomplished themselves : quietly. Evadne's
raging activity belonged to trivial or annoying things like spring cleaning or thunder*
storms. Well, the house belonged to him now. He opened the gate and went up
the asphalt path, sourly noticing that Evadne had as usual left out the lawn-mower,
though it might very easily have rained, with the wind coming up as it was. A stray
cat that had been sleeping in the tuft of pampas grass in the middle of the lawn was
roused by his coming, and fled insolently close to his legs. He hated all wild home-
less things, and bent for a stone to throw at it. But instead his fingers touched a slug,
which reminded him of the feeling of Evadne's flesh through the slit in her bathing
dress. And suddenly the garden was possessed by her presence : she seemed to
amble there as she had so often done, sowing seeds unwisely and tormenting the last
days of an ailing geranium by insane transplantation, exclaiming absurdly over such
mere weeds as morning glory. He caught the very clucking of her voice . . .
The front door opened at his touch.
The little lobby with its closed doors seemed stuffed with expectant silence. He
realised that he had come to the theatre of his great adventure. Then panic seized
him. Because this was the home where he and she had lived together so horribly
he doubted whether he could do this splendid momentous thing, for here he had
always been a poor thing with the habit of failure. His heart beat in him more
quickly than his raw feet could pad up the oilciothed stairs. Behind the deal door
at the end of the passage was death. Nothingness! It would escape him, even the
idea of It would escape him if he did not go to it at once. When he burst at last into
Its presence he felt so victorious that he sank back against the door waiting for death
to come to him without turning on the gas. He was so happy. His death was
coming true.
But Evadne lay on his deathbed. She slept there soundly, with her head flung
back on the pillows so that her eyes and brow seemed small in shadow, and her mouth
and jaw huge above her thick throat in the light. Her wet hair straggled across the
pillow on to a broken cane chair covered with her tumbled clothes. Her breast,
silvered with sweat, shone in the ray of the street lamp that had always disturbed their
nights. yThe counterpane rose enormously over her hips in rolls of glazed linen.
Out of mere innocent sleep her sensuality was distilling a most drunken pleasure.
Not for one moment did he think this a phantasmk appearance. Evadne was
not the sort of woman to have a ghost.
Still leaning against the door, he tried to think it all out : but his thoughts came
brokenly, because the dawnlight flowing in at the window confused him by its pale
glare and that lax figure on the bed held his attention. It must have been that
when he laid his murderous bands on her head she had simply dropped below the
116
surface and swum a lew strokes under water as any expert swimmer can. Probably
he bad never even put her into danger, for she was a great lusty creature and the
weir was a little place. He had imagined the wonder and peril of the battle as he
had imagined his victory. He sneezed exhaustingly, and from his physical distress
realised hiw absurd it was ever to have thought that he had killed her. Bodies
like his do not kill bodies like hers.
Now his soul was naked and lonely as though the walls of his body had fallen
m at death, and the grossness of Evadne's sleep made him suffer more unlovely a
destitution than any old beggarwoman squatting by the roadside in the rain. He
had thought he had had what every man most desires : one night of power over a
woman for the business of murder or love. But it had been a lie. Nothing beautiful
had ever happened to him. He would have wept, hut the hatred be had learnt on
the moors obstructed all tears in his throat. At least this night had given him passion
enough to put an end to it all.
Quietly he went to the window and drew down the sash. There was no flre=
place, so that sealed the room. Then he crept over to the gas bracket and raised
his thin hand, as he had imagined in his hour of vain glory by the lake.
He had forgotten Evadne's thrifty habit of turning off the gas at the main to
prevent leakage when she went to bed.
He was beaten. He undressed and got into bed : as he had done every night
for ten years, and as he would do every night until he died. Still sleeping, Evadne
caressed him with warm arms.
117
11*
INNER NECESSITY.
(Extracts from Kandinsky' s " Ueber das Geistige in der Kurst," translated by
Edward Wadsworth, by permission of Messrs. Constable, who have recently
published a translation of the book by M. T. H. Sadler : " The Art of Spiritual
Harmony/')
This book is a most important contribution to the psychology of modern art.
The author's eminence as an artist adds considerable value to the work — fine
artists as a rule being extremely reluctant to, or incapable of, expressing their ideas
In more than one medium. Herr Kandinsky, however, is a psychologist and a
metaphysician of rare intuition and inspired enthusiasm. He writes ol art — not m
its relation to the drawing>room or the modern exhibition, but in its relation to the
universe and the soul of man. He writes, not as an art historian, but essentially
as an artist to whom form and colour are as much the vital and integral parts of
the cosmic organisation as they are his means of expression.
The art of the East has always consciously and passionately expressed this point
of view, which, if it has been perceived dimty in Western art, has been only half=
heartedly expressed. European artists of the past have treated art almost entirely
from a too obviously and externally human outlook. Europe to=day, which is laying
the solid foundations of the Western art of to-morrow, approaches this task from the
deeper and more spiritual standpoint of the soul. And Herr Kandinsky is concerned
chiefly in pointing out that the raison d'etre, the beauty and the durability of art are
only possible if they have their roots in what he terms the Principle of Inner
Necessity.
'* Inner Necessity," he says, " arises out of three mystical fundamentals. It
is created out of three mystical necessities : —
1. Every artist, as a creator, has to express himself (Element of
Personality) .
2. Every artist, as the child of his epoch, has to express what is particular
to this epoch (Element of Style — in an inner sense, composed of the speech
of the epoch, and the speech of the nation, as long as the nation exists as such) .
3. Every artist, as the servant of art, has to express what is particular
to all art. (Element of the pure and eternal qualities of the art of all men,
of all peoples and of all times, which are to be seen in the works of art of all
artists of every nation and of every epoch, and which, as the principal elements
of art, know neither time nor space) .
** It is necessary to penetrate with one's mental vision only the first two elements
In order to see this third element exposed. One $ees then that a coarsely carved
119
Indian Temple pillar is animated with exactly the same spirit as even the most
modern vivacious work.
" Only the third element of the eternal and pure qualities remains ever alive.
It does not lose its strength with time, hut continually acquires more. An Egyptian
statue astounds us certainly more to=day than it could have astounded its contem-
poraries : lor them it was associated much too strongly with characteristics and
personalities of the period, which weakened its effect. To=day we hear in it the
exposed timbre of eternal art. And contrarily : the more a modern work possesses
the first two elements, naturally the more easily will it find access to the spirit of
its contemporaries. And further : the more the third element exists in a modern
work, the more will the first two he drowned, and consequently the access to the
spirit of its contemporaries becomes more difficult. On this account centuries must
sometimes pass away before the timbre of the third element reaches the soul of man.
** The preponderance, then, of this third element in a work of art is a sign of
its greatness and the greatness of the artist. '
" These three mystical necessities are the three necessary elements of a work
of art and are closely united to one another. . . . The event of the development
of art consists to a certain extent of the progression of the pure and external from
the elements of personality and the style of the period. So that these two elements
are not only accompanying forces, but also restraining forces.
" These two elements are of a subjective nature. The whole epoch desires to
reflect itself and express its life aesthetically. The artist desires to express himself
in the same way, and chooses only those forms which are related to his spirit.
" Gradually in the end the style of the epoch shapes itself and acquires a certain
external and subjective form. The pure and eternal art is on the contrary the
objective element which becomes intelligible by means of the subjective.
" The inevitable desire to express the objective is the force which is here termed
Inner Necessity, and which to-day extracts ONE universal form from the subjective
and to morrow another. . . . It is clear then that the inner spiritual force of
art uses contemporary forms only as a step by which to progress.
In short — the effect of Inner Necessity, or the development of art, is a
progressive expression of the eternally objective within the temporarily subjective.
Or otherwise the subjugation of the subjective by the objective.
"So one sees finally (and this is of indescribable importance for all time, and
especially for to-day) that the search after personality, after style (and consequently
national style) , cannot only never be attained by this search, but also has not the
120
Drawing.
Jacob Epstein.
xv.
.:■"■ j ! I
BUI
; ;'--
Drawing,
Jacob Epstein.
XVI.
great importance which today Is imputed to it. And one sees that the common
relationship between works that have not become effete after centuries, but have
always become more and more powerful, does not lie in externality, but in the root
at roots— the mystical content of Art."
And this Principle of Inner Necessity Herr Kandlnsky applies not only to the
basic Inspiration of creation, but also to the concrete problems of execution. This
same force that animates the roots must generate a solid stem and permeate the
picture in every branch and fibre, and In the organic structure of every leaf.
This leads him to an extended consideration of the emotional and psychical effect
of forms and colours as such, divorced as far as is humanly possible from their
attendant associations. And Herr Kandlnsky does not consider the effect of form
and colour on the soul only, bat also its relationship to the other senses and its effect
on the physical organism. Colour is more habitually accredited with powers of
emotion than form, but by establishing a common root principle with regard to the
•motional effects of form and colour Herr Kandinsky destroys this erroneous opinion.
And he does this not only by means of logical argument and metaphysical
ratiocination, bnt also by a minute analysis of the colours themselves — their physical
characteristics, and the possibilities of psychic effect In all their gradations of light*
nets and darkness, and to their warm and cold tones.
Form (i.e., the suitability of the form to the emotion the artist wishes to
express) springs from the same fundamental Principle of Innner Necessity, and has
always a psychic import. And this is true not only of the whole composition of a
picture, but also of its component parts and their relationship one to another, and
also again of the form created by their relationship to the whole composition,
** Form alone, even if it is quite abstract and geometrical, has its inner thnbre,
and is a spiritual entity with qualities that are identical with this form : a triangle
(whether it he acute-angled, obtuse-angled or equilaierial) is an entity of this sort
with a spiritual perfume proper to itself alone. In combination with other forms
Ibis perfume becomes differentiated, acquires accompanying nuances, but remains
radically unalterable, like the smell of the rose which can never he mistaken for
that of the violet.
*' It is easy to notice here that some colours are accentuated in value by some
forms and weakened by others. In any case bright colours vibrate more strongly
In pointed, angular forms (e.g., a yellow triangle). Those that have a tendency
to deepen will increase this effect in round forms (e.g. , a blue circle) . It is naturally
clear on the other hand that the unsuitabllity of the form to the colour must not be
regarded as something ** inharmonious," bat on th# contrary as a new possibility,
and consequently harmony.
•* Form in the narrower sense is, however, nothing more than the boundaries
121
between one surface and another. This is Its external meaning. Bat since every-
thing external implicit? conceals an interior (which comes to light forcibly or feebly) ,
so also every form has an inner content.
"FORM IS THEN THE UTTERANCES OF ITS INNER CON-
TENT. This is its inner meaning. One must think here of the simile of the
piano, but apply "form" instead of "colour." The artist is the hand, which,
through this or that key ( = form) makes the human soul vibrate appropriately.
It is clear then that the harmony of form must be based only on the appropriate
striking of the human soul.
" This we termed the Principle of Inner Necessity.
" The two aspects of form just mentioned are at the same time Its two aims.
And on account of this the external limitation is thoroughly appropriate only when
tt best expresses the inner meaning of the form. The exterior of the form, i.e., its
boundaries, to which the form in this case is subservient, may be very diverse.
** But in spite of ail diversity that the form can offer, it nevertheless will never
exceed two exterior limits, namely : —
1. Either the form serves as a shape, and by means of this shape, to cut
out a material object on the surface : i.e., to draw this material object on the
surface, or
2. The form remains abstract : i.e., it represents no real object, but is
a perfect abstract entity. Such pure abstract entities, which as such have their
life, their influence and their effect, are a square, a circle, a triangle, a rhombus,
a trapezium, and the other innumerable forms which become ever more com-
plicated and possess no mathematical significance. All these forms are citizens
of the abstract empire with equal rights."
Once having accepted the emotional significance of form and colour as such,
it follows that the necessity for expressing oneself exclusively with forms that are
based on nature is only a temporary limitation similar to, though less foolish than,
the eighteenth century brown tree convention.
"... to-day's inner laws of harmony become to-morrow's external
laws, which on further application depend lor their life only on this now external
Necessity."
And so logically this axiom must be accepted : that the artist can employ any
forms (natural, abstracted or abstract) to express himself, if his feelings demand it.
Those who perceive no emotional significance in form and colour as such,
invariably argue that to avoid human and natural forms is to sterilize one's creative
faculties and to rob oneself of all that is noble in art. But —
" On the other hand, there is no perfect concrete form in art. It is not possible
to represent ft natural form exactly. The artist succumbs — well or badly — either to
123
bis band or bis eye, which is this case are more artistic than his soul, which is
incapable of desiring more than photography. The conscious artist, however, who
cannot be content with recording material objects, seeks unconditionally to give
expression to the object represented — what one formerly called to *' idealise/' later
on to " stylize," and what to-morrow may be called anything else.
"This impossibility and futility (in art) of copying an object without any
aim, this striving to borrow expression from the object itself, is the starting point
from which the artist begins to aspire to purely aesthetic aims (pictural) as opposed
to literary representation.
" And so the abstract element comes always gradually to the front in art — which
even yesterday was concealed timidly and was scarcely visible behind purely material
endeavours.
'* And this development and eventual proponderance of the abstract is natural.
" It is natural, since, the more the organic form is repelled, the more the abstract
comes to the front and acquires timbre.
" The organic that remains, however, has, as we have said, its own inner
Timbre, which is either identical with the inner Timbre of the second component —
or abstract part of the form (simple combination of both elements) — or It may be of
a very different nature — (complicated and perhaps necessarily inharmonious
combination) .
" In any case, however, the Timbre of the Organic is heard in the form it
chooses, even if it is quite suppressed. On this account the choice of the real object
is important. In the twofold Timbre (spiritual chord) of both component parts of
the form the organic can support the abstract (by means of concord or discord) or
it can be disturbing to it. The object can create only an accident Timbre, which,
if substituted by another, calls forth no essential difference in the fundamental timbre.
"A rhomboidal composition is constructed, for instance, out of a number of
human figures. One judges it with one's feelings and asks oneself the question —
are the human figures absolutely necessary to the composition, or could one substitute
other organic forms for them without thereby injuring the inner fundamental Timbre
of the composition?
*' And if * yes ' — then the case is imminent where the Timbre of the object not
only does not help the Timbre of the abstraction, but directly injures it : inappropriate
Timbre of the object weakens the Timbre of the abstraction. And this is not only
logical, but is, as a matter of fact, the case in art. In the above case then, either
some object should be found which corresponds more to the inner Timbre of the
abstraction (corresponding concordantly or discordantly) or this whole form should
remain purely abstract.
"The mow abatract th« form, the more purely and therefore the more
123
primitively it will resound. In a composition then, where the corporeal Is more or
less superfluous, ose can more or less leave it out and substitute for it either purely
abstract forms or abstracted corporeal forms. In either of these cases one's feelings
must be the only judge, guide and arbiter. And indeed, the more the artist uses
these abstract or abstracted forms, the more he becomes at home in their kingdom
and the deeper he enters into this sphere. And in the same way the spectator, who
gathers more and more knowledge of the abstract speech until he finally masters it,
is guided in this by the artist.
" And so on the one hand the difficulties of art will increase, but at the same
time the abundance of forms — as a means of expression — will increase also, both in
quality and quantity. Here the question of bad drawing will disappear and will be
replaced by another much more aesthetic consideration. How far is the inner
Timbre of the given object mystified or defined? This alteration In one's point of
view will always progress and lead to a stilt greater enrichment of one's means of
expression, since mystery is an enormous force in art. The combination of the
mysterious and the definite will create a new possibility of Leitmotive in a com*
position of forms. . . .
" Composition of this kind (the corporeal and particularly the abstract) will
always appear as unfounded arbitrariness to those who do not perceive the inner
Timbre of forms. The apparent inconsequent distortion of the single forms on the
surface of the picture appears in these cases like an empty joke with the
forms. , . .
" When, for instance, features or different parts of the body are distorted or
perverted for aesthetic reasons, one strikes against purely pictorial questions as well
as anatomical ones, which restrain the pictorial intentions and obtrude upon their
subsidiary calculations. In our case, however, everything subsidiary disappears,
and there remains only the essential— the aesthetic aim. Exactly this apparently
arbitrary, but In reality extremely determinable possibility of distorting forms is one
of the sources of the endless number of purely aesthetic creations.
" The flexibility of the single form, then, its inner organic change, If one may
say so ; its direction In the picture (movement), the preponderance of the corporeal
over the abstract In this single form on the one hand, and on the other the com-
bination of the forms which create the big shape of the whole picture : further, the
principles of concord and discord in all the aforesaid parts, i.e., the juxtaposition
of the single forms, the interpenetration of one form with another, the distortion,
the binding and tearing apart of the individual forms, the same treatment of the
groups of forms, of the combination of the mysterious with the definite, the rythmic
with the nonrythmic on the same plane, the abstract forms with the purely
geometrical (simple or complicated) and the less definitely geometrical, the same
treatment of the combination of the boundary lines of the forms from one another
(heavy or light), etc., etc.— all these are the elements which create the possibility
of a purely aesthetic counterpoint and which will lead up to this counterpoint.
124
" . . . And colour, which Is itself a material for counterpoint, which
conceals in itself endless possibilities, will, in conjunction with drawing, lead to a
great pictorial counterpoint on which will be built also a pictorial composition that
will serve God as a real, pure art. And the same infallible guide brings it to that
dizzy height— The Principle of Inner Necessity."
This inslstaoce on the value of one's feelings as the only aesthetic impulse,
means logically that the artist U not only entitled to treat form and colour according
to his inner dictates, but that it is his duty to do so, and consequently his life (his
thoughts and deeds) becomes the raw material out of which he must carve his
creations. The author points out that on account of this, although the artist is
absolutely free to express himself as he will in art, he is not free in life. " He is
not only a king ... in the sense that he has great power, but also hi the
sense that his duties are great.*'
The constructive tendencies of painting Herr Kandinsky divides into two
groups — (1) simple composition of a more or less obviously geometrical character,
which he calls " melodic composition," and which has been more generally employed
by western artists (Duccio, Ravenna mosaics, Cezanne), and (2) complicated
rythmic composition which he calls " symphonic," and which is the characteristic
medium of oriental art and of Kandinsky himself.
ias
VORTECES AND NOTES
BY
WYNDHAM LEWIS.
5 tags.
Gaudier Brzeska,
xv is
Group.
Cuthbert Hams! tor,
" LIFE IS THE IMPORTANT THING ! '
Id the revolt against Formula, revolutionaries in art sell themselves to Nature.
Without Nature's aid the " coup ** could not be accomplished. They, of course,
become quite satisfied slaves of Nature, as their fathers were of Formula. It never
occurs to them that Nature is just as sterile a Tyrant. This is what happened with
the Impressionists.
An idea which haunts the head of many people is that " Nature " is synonymous
with freshness, richness, constant renewal, life: "Nature" and natural art
synonymous with " Life.
»*
This idea, trotted out in various forms, reminds one of the sententious
pronouncement one so often hears ;" LIFE is the important thing! " It is always
said with an air of trenchant and final wisdom, the implication being : " You artists
are so indirect and intellectual, worry your heads about this and about that, while
life is there all the time, etc., etc."
If yon ask these people what they mean by LIFE (for there are as many Lives
as there are people in the world) , it becomes evident that they have no profounder
view ol life in their mind than can be included in the good dinner, good sleep,
roll -in -the -grass category.
'* After all, life is the important thing! " That is to live as nearly like a
chicken or a King Charles as is compatible with having read " Sex and Character "
and"* 1 L'IsIe des Peng cuius " in a translation.
This is the typical cowardly attitude of those who have failed with their
minds, and are discouraged and unstrung before the problems of their Spirit ; who
fall back on their stomachs and the meaner working of their senses.
Nature will give you, then, grass enough for cow or a sheep, any fleshly
conquest you can compass. One thing she is unable to give, that that is peculiar
to men. Such stranger stuff men must get out of themselves.
To consider for a moment this wide-spread notion, that " Nature,*' as the
majority mean it, is synonymous really with " Life," and inexhaustible freshness
of material s—
NATURE 15 NO MORE INEXHAUSTIBLE, FRESH, WELLING
UP WITH INVENTION, ETC., THAN LIFE IS TO THE AVERAGE
MAN OF FORTY, WITH HIS GROOVE, HIS DISILLUSION, AND
HIS LITTLE ROUND OF HABITUAL DISTRACTIONS.
It is true, " Life Is there all the time." Bat he cannot get at it except through
himself. For him too, even— apart from his daily fodder-^ie has to draw out of
himself any of that richness and fineness that is something more and different to the
provender and the contentment of the cow.
For the suicide, with the pistol in his mouth, " Life is there," as well, with
it's variety and possibilities. But a dissertation to that effect would not influence
Him ; on the contrary.
For those men who look to Nature for support, she does not care.
" Life 'Ms a hospital for the weak and incompetent.
" Life " is a retreat of the defeated.
It is very salubrious — The cooking is good—
Amusments are provided.
In the same way, Nature is a blessed retreat, in art, for those artists whose
imagination is mean and feeble, whose vocation and instinct are uurobust. When
they find themselves in front of Infinite Nature with their little paint-box, they
squint their eyes at her professionally, and coo with lazy contentment and excite-
ment to just so much effort as is hygienic and desirable. She does their thinking
and seeing for them. Of course, when they commence painting, technical difficulties
come along, they sweat a bit, and anxiety settles down on them. But then they
regard themselves as martyrs and heroes. They are lusty workmen, grappling with
the difficulties of their trade I
No wonder painting has been discredited ! " Life " IS the important thing,
indeed, if much painting of Life that we see is the alternative. Who would not rather
walk ten miles across country (yes, ten miles, my friend), and use his eyes, nose
and muscles, than possess ten thousand Impressionist oil-paintings of that country
side?
There is only one thing better than " Life "—than using your eyes, nose, ears
and muscles — and that is something very abstruse and splendid, in no way directly
dependent on " Life." It is no EQUIVALENT f or Life, but ANOTHER Life,
as NECESSARY to existence as the former.
This NECESSITY is what the indolent and vulgar journalist mind chiefly
denies it. All the accusations of " mere intelligence " or " cold intellectuality 'V
centre round misconception of this fact.
Before leaving this beautiful useful phrase^-of unctuous " Life," etc.— I would
prevent a confusion. I have been speaking so far of the Impressionist sensibility,
and one of the arguments used by that sensibility to disparage the products of a new
iflfort in art.
ISO
Daumler, whoso work was saturated with reference to tile, has been, tor
Instance, used to support Imitation of Nature, on grounds of a common realism.
This man would have been no more capable of squatting down and imitating the
forms of life day after day than he would have been able to copy one of his crowds.
It was Life that MOVED MUCH TOO QUICKLY FOR ANYTHING,
BUT THE IMAGINATION that he lived for. He combined in his art great
plastic gifts with great literary gifts, and was no doubt an impure painter, according
to actual standards. But it was great literature, always, along with great art.
And as far as " Life " is concerned, the Impressionists produced nothing that was
in any sense a progress from this great realist, though much that was a decadence.
Many reproductions of Degas paintings it would be impossible, quite literally, to
distinguish from photographs: and bis pastels only less so because of the accident
of the medium. The relative purity of their palette, and consequent habituating
of the public to brighter colours, was their only useful innovation. Their analytic
study of light lead into the Point illiste cul de sac (when it was found that although!
light can be decomposed, oil-paint is unfortunately not light.
181
FUTURISM, MAGIC AND Lflfc
1. The Futurist theoretician should be a Professor of Hoffman Romance, and
attempt the manufacture of a perfect being.
Art merges in Life again everywhere.
Leonardo was the first Futurist, and, incidentally, an airman among Quattro
Cento angels.
His Mona Lisa eloped from the Louvre like any woman.
She is back again now, smiling, with complacent reticence, as before hei*
escapade ; no one can say when she will be off once more, she possesses so much
vitality.
Her olive pigment is electric, so much more so than the carnivorous Belgian
bumpkins by Rubens in a neighbouring room, who, besides, are so big they could
not slip about in the same subtle fashion.
Rubens IMITATED Life — borrowed the colour of it's crude blood, traced the
sprawling and surging of it's animal hulks.
Leonardo MADE NEW BEINGS, delicate and severe, with as ambitious an
intention as any ingenious mediaeval Empiric.
He multiplied in himself, too, Life's possibilities. He was not content to he
as an individual Artist alone, any more than he was content with Art.
Life won him with gifts and talents.
2. In Northern Europe (Germany, Scandinavia and Russia) for the last hall
century, the intellectual world has developed savagely in one direction— that of Life.
His war'ialk, sententious elevation and much besides, Marinettl picked up
from Nietzsche.
Strlndberg, with his hysterical and puissant autobiographies, life long tragic
coquetry with Magic, extensive probing of female flesh and spirit, is the great
Scandinavian figure beat representing this tendency.
Bergsen, the philosopher of Impressionism, stands for this new pTWcienxe Is
France.
Everywhere LIFE is said instead of ART.
3. By " Life " is not meant good dinner, sleep and copulation.
18*
There is rather ooly room tor ONE Life, in Existence, and Art has to behave
itself and struggle.
Alto Art has a selfish trick of cutting the connections.
The Wild Body and Primitive Bratn have found a new outside art of their own.
The Artist pleasure man Is too naturalistic for this age of religion.
" The theatre is immoral, because a place where people go to enjoy other
people's sufferings and tears.'* (to d'Alembert.)
The soft stormy flood of Rousseanlsm, Die ken's sentimental ghouMike gloating
over the death of little Nell, the beastly and ridiculous spirit of Keats' lines: —
" I! your mistress some RICH anger show,
Imprison her soft hand and let her rave,
While you feast long," etc.
disgusted about 1870 people who had not got a corner in dog's nerves or heart idling
about the stomach instead of attending to its business of pump, and whose heads were,
with an honest Birmingham screw, straightly riveted into their bodies.
The good artttsts, as well, repudiated the self indulgent, special -privileged,
priggish and cowardly role of " Artist," and joined themselves to the Birmingham
screws,
England emerged from Lupanars and Satanics about 1960, the Bourgeoisie
having thoughtfully put Wilde in prison, and Swinburne being retired definitely to
Putney.
This brings you to the famous age where we are at present gathered, in which
Humanity's problem is " live with the minimum of pleasure possible for bare
existence."
4. Killing somebody must be the greatest pleasure in existence : either like
hilling yourself without being interfered with by the instinct of self-preservation —
or exterminating the instinct of self-preservation itself E
But if you begin depositing your little titrations of pleasure in Humanity's
Savings Bank, you want something for your trouble.
We all have a penetrative right over each other, to the tune of titivations lost,
if not of heart blood.
5. Not many people have made up their minds yet as to the ultimate benefit
or the reverse of this state of affairs.
Some people enjoy best by proxy, some by masturbation ; others prefer to do
things themselves, or in the direct regular partnership of existence.
You are fiercely secretive and shy : or dislike interference.
133
Most fine artists cannot keep themselves out of wood and iron, or printed sheets :
they leave too much o! themselves in theft furniture.
For their universality a course of egotistic hardening, if anything, is required.
Buddha found that his disciples, good average disciples, required a severe
discipline of expansion ; he made them practice every day torpedoing East and West,
to inhabit other men, and become wise and gentle.
The Artist favours solitude, conditions where silence and purity are possible,
as most men favour gregariousness where they shine and exist most.
But the Artist is compensated, at present, by a crown, and will eventually
arrange things for the best.
6. It is all a matter of the most delicate adjustment between voracity of Art
and digestive quality of Life.
The finest Art is not pure Abstraction, nor is it unorganised life.
Dreams come In the same category as the easy abstractions and sentimentalities
of art known as *' Belgian."
Great Artists with their pictures and books provide Nursing Homes for the
Future, where Hypnotic Treatment is the principal stunt.
To dream is the same thing as to lie : anybody but an invalid or a canaille feels
the discomfort and repugnance of something not clean in it.
There is much fug in the Past— dHe, no doubt, to the fact that most of the
ordinary Ancients neglected their persons.
Realism is the cleanliness of the mind.
Actuality or " fashionableness " is the desire to be spick and span, and be a
man remade and burnished half-an-hour ago.
Surprise is the brilliant and prodigious fire-fly, that lives only twenty minutes :
the excitement of seeing him burn through his existence like a wax-vesta makes you
marvel at the slow-living world.
The most perishable colours in painting (such as Veronese green, Prussian
Blue, Alizarin Crimson) are the most brilliant.
This is as it should be : we should hate other ages, and don't Want to fetch
£40,000, like a horse.
7. The actual approximation of Art to Nature, which one sees great signs
of to-day, would negative effort equally.
The Artist, like Narcissus, gets his nose nearer and nearer the surface of Life.
He will get it nipped off if he is not careful, by some Pecksniff-shark suuHing
134
H*s lean belly near the surface, or other lurker beneath his image, who has been
feeding on It's radiance.
Reality is in the artist, the image only in life, and he should only approach so
near as Is necessary (or a good view.
The question ot focus depends on the power of his eyes, or their quality.
8. The Futurist statue will move : then it will live a little : but any idiot can
do better than that with his good wife, round the corner.
Nature's definitely ahead of us in contrivances of that sort.
We must remain children, less scientific than a Boy Scout, but less naive than
Flaubert jeune 1 \
Nature is grown up.
WE could not make an Elephant.
9. With Picasso's revolution in the plastic arts, the figure of the Artist
becomes still more blurred and uncertain.
Engineer or artist might conceivably become transposable terms, or one, at
least, imply the other.
What is the definite character of the artist ; obvious pleasure, as an element,
shrinking daily, or rather approximating with Pleasure as it exists in every other
form of invention?
Picasso has proved himself lately too amateurish a carpenter.
Boot making and joining also occur to one.
Or the artist will cease to be a workman, and take his place with the Composer
and Architect?
The artist till now has been his own interpreter, improvisation and accidents of
a definite medium playing a very important part.
To=day there are a host of first rate interpreters : the few men with the invention
and brains should have these at their disposal : but unfortunately they all want to
be " composers," and their skill and temperament allow them to do very good
imitations.
But perhaps things are better as they are : for it you think of those stormy
Jewish faces met m the corridors of the tube, Beethovenesque and femininely
ferocious, on the concert-bills, or M our great Shakespearean actors," you feel that
Beethoven and Shakespeare are for the student, and not for the Bechstein Hall or
the modem theatre.
At any period an artist should have been able to remain in his studio, imagining
form, and provided he could transmit the substance and logic of his inventions to
another man, could have, without putting brush to canvas, be the best artist of
his day.
135
NOTE
[on some German Woodcuts at the Twenty-One Gallery].
At tbls miniature sculpture, the Woodcut, Germans have always excelled.
It Is like the one>siring fiddle of the African.
This art is African, in that It is sturdy, cutting through every thus to the
monotonous wall o! space, and intense yet hale : permeated by Eternity, an atmos-
phere in which only the black core ol Life rises and is silhouetted.
The black, nervous fluid of existence flows and forms into hard, stagnant masses
in this white, luminous body. Or it is like a vivid sea pierced by rocks, on to the
surface of which boned shapes rise and bask blackly.
It deals with Man and objects subject to him, on Royal white, cut out in black
sadness.
White and Black are two elements. Their possible proportions and relations
to each other are fixed. — All the subtleties of the Universe are driven into these two
pens, one of which Is black, the other white, with their multitude.
It is African black.
It is not black, invaded by colour, as in Beardsley, who was never staple
enough for this blackness. But unvarying, vivid, harsh black of Africa.
The quality of the woodcut is rough and brutal, surgery of the senses, cutting
and not scratching : extraordinarily limited and exasperating.
It is one of the greatest tests of fineness,
Where the Germans are best — disciplined, blunt, thick and brutal, with a black
simple skeleton of organic emotion — they best qualify for this form of art.
All the things gathered here do not come within these definitions. Melzer is
sculpture, too, but by suggestion, not in fact. The principle of his work Is as
infatuation for bronzes.
Pechstein has for nearest parallel the drawings and lithographs ol Henri
Matisse.
Marc, Bolz, Kandinsky, Helblg and Morgner would make a very sottd show
in one direction.
Bolz's *' Maskenfest " is a Kermesse of black strips and atoms of life. His
other design, like a playingcard, is a nerve or woman, and attendant fascinated
atoms, crushed or starred.
Morgner drifts into soft Arctic snow«patches.
Marc merges once more in leaves and sun-spotting the protective markings
of animals, or in this process makes a forest Into tigers.
Some woodcuts by Mr. H. Wadsworth, though not part of the German show,
are to be seen In the Gallery. One of a port, is particularly fine, with Its whits
excitement, and compression of clean metallic shapes In the well of the Harbour,
as though in a broken cannon-mouth.
186
POLICEMAN AND ARTIST.
1. In France no Artist is as good as " the Policeman."
Rousseau the Douanier, the best policeman, is better than Derain, the best
French Artist.
Not until Art reaches the fresher strata of the People does it find a vigorous
enough bed to flourish.
There is too much cultivation, and only the Man of the People escapes the
softening and intellectualizing.
There is one exception — the cretin or sawney.
Cezanne was an imbecile, as Rousseau was a " Policeman."
Nature's defence for Cezanne against the deadly intelligence of his country
was to make him a sort of idiot.
2. In England the Policeman is dull.
The People (witness dearth of Folk-song, ornament, dance, art of anf sort*
till you get to the Border or the Marches of Wales) is incapable of Art.
The Artist in England has the advantages and gifts possessed by the Policemae
in France,
His position Is very similar.
William Blake was our arch»Pottceman,
Had Blake, Instead of passing his time with Renaissance bogeys and athletes,
painted his wife and himself naked in their conservatory (as, in a more realist!?
tradition, he quite conceivably might have done), the result would have been very
similar to Rosseau's portraits.
The English Artist (unlike the Frenchman of the people) has no Artlstte
tradition In his Mood.
His freshness and genius is apt to be obscured, therefore (as to the case oi
Blake, THE English Artist), by a borrowed Italian one.
3. It Is almost as dangerous in England to be a sawney, as it is in France to he
intelligent,
Cezanne hi England would have to be a very intelligent fellow.
(You can't be too intelligent here I)
(It is the only place in Europe where that is the case.)
Blake In France would have been a Policeman.
It Is Oner to be an Artist than to be a policeman !
1ST
FENG SHUI AND CONTEMPORARY
FORM.
1. That a mountain, river or person may not " suit " — the air of the mountain,
the character of the person — and so influence lives, most men see.
But that a hill or man can be definitely disastrous, and by mere existence be
as unlucky as hemlock is poisonous, shame or stupidity prevents most from admitting.
A certain position of the eyes, their fires crossing ; black (as a sort of red) as
sinister ; white the mourning colour of China ; white flowers, in the West, signifying
death — white, the radium among colonrs, and the colour that comes from farthest
off : 13, a terrible number : such are much more important discoveries than
gravitation.
The law of gravitation took it's place in our common science following the fall
of an apple on somebody's head, which induced reflection.
13 struck people down again and again like a ghost, till they ceased hunting
for something human, but invisible, and found a Number betraying it's tragic nature
and destiny.
Some Numbers are like great suns, round which the whole of Humanity must
turn.
But people have a special personal Numerical which for them in particular is
an object of service and respect.
2. Telegraph poles were the gloomiest of all Western innovations for China :
their height disturbed definitely the delicate equilibrium of lives.
They were consequently resisted with bitterness.
Any textbook on China becomes really eloquent in it's scorn when It arrives
at the ascendancy of the Geomancers.
Geomancy is the art by which the favourable influence of the shape of trees,
weight of neighbouring water and it's colour, height of surrounding houses, is
determined.
" No Chinese street is built to form a line of uniform height " (H. A. Giles),
the houses are of unequal heights to fit the destinies of the Inhabitants.
I do not suppose that good Geomancers are more frequent than good artists.
But their functions and intellectual equipment should be very alike.
3. Sensitiveness to volume, to the life and passion of lines, meaning of water,
hurried conversation of the sky, or silence, impossible propinquity of endless clay
nothing will right, a mountain that is a genius (good or evil) or a bore, makes the
artist : and the volume, quality, or luminosity of a star at birth of Astrologers is also
a clairvoyance within the painters gift.
In a painting certain forms MUST be SO ; in the same meticulous, profound
manner that your pen or a book must lie on the table at a certain angle, your clothes
at night be arranged in a set personal symetry, certain birds be avoided, a set of
railings tapped with your hand as you pass, without missing one.
Personal tricks and ceremonies of this description are casual examples of the
same senses' activity.
138
RELATIVISM AND PIGASSO'S
LATEST WORK.
(Small structures in cardboard, wood, zinc, glass string, etc, tacked, sown or
stuck together is what Picasso has last shown as his.)
1 . Picasso has become a miniature naturalistic sculptor of the vast natures —
raorte of modern life,
Picasso has come out of the canvas and has commenced to build up his shadows
against reality.
Reality is the Waterloo, Will o' the wisp, or siren of artistic genius.
*' Reality " is to the Artist what " Truth " is to the philsospher.
(The Artists OBJECTIVE is Reality, as the Philosopher's is Truth.)
The (t Real Thing " is always Nothing. REALITY is the nearest conscious
and safe place to " Reality." Once an Artist gets caught in that machinery, he Is
soon cut in half— literally so.
2. The moment an image steps from the convention of the canvas into life,
it's destiny is different.
The statue has been, for the most part, a stone-man.
An athletic and compact statue survives. (African, Egyption Art, etc., where
faces are flattened, limbs carved in the mass of the body for safety as well as
sacredness.)
You can believe that a little patch of paint two inches high on a piece of canvas
is a mountain. It is difficult to do so with a two inch clay or stone model of one.
3. These little models of Picasso's reproduce the surface and texture of
objects. So directly so, that, should a portion of human form occur, he would
hardly be content until he could include in his work a plot of human flesh.
But it is essentially NATURESMORTES, the enamel of a kettle, wall=paper,
a canary* s cage, handle of mandoline or telephone.
4. These wayward little objects have a splendid air, starting up in pure
creation, with their invariable and lofty detachment from any utilitarian end or
purpose.
But they do not seem to possess the necessary physical stamina to survive.
You feel the glue will come unstuck and that you would only have to blow with
your mouth to shatter them.
1391
They imitate like children the large, unconscious, serious machines and coa*
trivancies of modem life.
So near them do they come* that they appear ev*H a sort of new little parasite
bred on machinery.
Finally* they lack the one purpose, or even necessity, of a work of Art :
namely Life.
5. In the experiments of modern art we come face to face with the question of
the raison d'etre of Art more acutely than often before, and the answer comes more
clearly and unexpectedly.
Most of Picasso's latest work (on canvas as well) is a sort of machinery. Tet
these machines neither propel nor make any known thing : they are machines without
a purpose.
If yon conceive them as carried out on a grand scale, as some elaborate work
of engineering the paradox becomes more striking.
(These machines would, in that case, before the perplexed and enraged questions
of men, have only one answer and justification.
If they could suggest or convince that they were MACHINES OF LIFE,
a sort of LIVING plastic geometry, then their existence would be justified,
6. To say WHY any particular man is alive is a difficult business : and we
cannot obviously ask more of a picture than of a man.
A picture either IS or it IS NOT.
A work of art could not start from such a purpose as the manufacture of
nibs or nails.
These mysterious machines of modern art are what they are TO BE ALIVE.
Many of Picasso's works answer this requirement,
But many, notably the latest small sculpture he has shown, attach themselves
too coldly to OTHER machines of daily use and inferior significance.
Or, he practically MAKES little natnre-mortes, a kettle, plate, and piece of
wall-paper, for example*
He bo longer so much interprets, as definitely MAKES, nature (and
" DEAD " nature at that) .
A kettle is never as fine w a man.
This Is a challenge to the kettles.
110
THE NEW EGOS.
1. A civilized savage, In a desert-city, surrounded by very simple objects and
restricted number of beings, reduces his Great Art down to the simple black human
bullet.
His sculpture is monotonous. The one compact human form is his Tom-Tom.
We have nothing whatever to do with this individual and his bullet.
Our eyes sweep life horizontally.
Were they in the top of our head, and full of blank light, our art would be
different, and more like that of the savage.
The African we have referred to cannot allow his personality to venture forth
or amplify itself, for it would dissolve in vagueness of space.
It has to be swaddled up in a bullet-like lump.
But the modern town*dwe!ler of our civilization sees everywhere fraternal
moulds for his spirit, and interstices of a human world.
He also sees multitude, and infinite variety of means of life, a world and
elements he controls,
Impersonality becomes a disease with him.
Socially, in a parellel manner, his egotism takes a different form.
Society is sufficiently organised for bis ego to walk abroad
Life is really no more secure, or his egotism less acute, but the frontier's inter*
penetrate, individual demarcations are confused and interests dispersed.
2. According to the most approved contemporary methods in boxing, two men
burrow into each other, and after an infinitude of little intimate pommels, on&
collapses.
In the old style, two distinct, heroic figures were confronted, and one ninepin
tried to knock the other ninepin over.
We all to*day (possibly with a coldness reminiscent of the insect-world) are
in each other's vitals — overlap, intersect, and are Siamese to any extent.
Promiscuity is normal ; such separating things as love, hatred, friendship are
superseded by a more realistic and logical passion.
The human form still runs, like a wave, through the texture or body of existence,
and therefore of art.
But jnst as the old form of egotism is no longer fit for such conditions as now
prevail, so the isolated human figure of most ancient Art is an anachronism.
THE ACTUAL HUMAN BODY BECOMES OF LESS IMPOR-
TANCE EVERY DAY.
It now, literally, EXISTS much less.
Love, hatred, etc., imply conventional limitations.
All clean, clear cut emotions depend on the element of strangeness, and surprise
and primitive detachment.
Dehumanization is the chief diagnostic of the Modern World.
One feels the immanence of some REALITY more than any former human
beings can have felt it.
This superceding of specific passions and easily determinable emotions by such
uniform, more animal insrtucttvely logical Passion of Life, of different temperature*,
but similar fat kind, fes, then, the phenomenon to which We would relate the mort
fux rdamvnt a l tendencies in present art, and by which We would gage it's temper.
141
ORCHESTRA OF MEDIA.
Fainting, with the Venetians, was like pianoforte playing as compared to the
extended complicated orchestra aspired to by the Artist to*day.
Sculpture of the single sententious or sentimental figure on the one hand* and
painting as a dignified accomplished game on the other, is breaking up and caving in.
The medium (of oil-paint) is modifiable, like an instrument. Few to* day have
forsaken it for the more varied instruments, or orchestra of media, but have contented
themselves with violating it.
The reflection back on the present, however, of this imminent extension — or, at
least the preparation for this taking^m of other media — has for effect a breaking up
of the values of beauty, etc., in contemporary painting.
The surfaces of cheap manufactured goods, woods, steel, glass, etc., already
appreciated for themselves, and their possibilities realised, have finished the days of
fine paint.
Even if painting remain intact, it will be much more supple and extended,
containing all the elements of discord and " ugliness " consequent on the attack
against traditional harmony.
The possibilities of colour, exploitation of discords, odious combinations, etc.,
have been little exploited.
A painter like Matisse has always been harmonious, with a scale of colour
pleasantly Chinese.
Kandinsky at his best is much more original and bitter. But there are fields
of discord untouched.
ttft
THE MELODRAMA OF MODERNITY.
1. Of all the tags going, " Futurist," lor general application, serves as well
as any for the active painters of to. day.
It is picturesque and easily inclusive.
It is especially justifiable here in England where so particular care or know-
ledge of the exact (or any other in matters of art) signification of this word exist.
In France, for instance, no one would be likely to apply the term " Futurist "
to Picasso or Derain ; for everyone there is familiar with Marinetti's personality,
the detail of his propaganda, and also the general history of the Cubist movement —
Picasso's part, Derain' s part, and the Futurist's.
On the other hand, here in England, Marquet, Vuillard, Besnard, even, I
expect, would be called *' Futurist " fairly often.
As " Futurist," in England, does not mean anything more than a painter, either
a little, or very much, occupying himself with questions of a renovation of art, and
showing a tendency to rebellion against the domination of the Past, it is not necessary
to correct it.
We may hope before long to find a new word.
If Kandinsky had found a better word than " Expressionist " he might have
supplied a useful alternative.
2. Futurism, as preached by Marinetti, is largely Impressionism up=to=date.
To this is added his Automobilism and Nietzsche stunt.
With a lot of good sense and vitality at his disposal, he hammers away in thq
blatant mechanism of his Manifestos, at his idee fixe of Modernity.
From that harsh swarming of animal vitality in almost Eastern cities across the
Alps, his is a characteristic voice, with execration making his teeth ragged, blood
weltering and leaping round his eyes.
lie snarls and bawls about the Past and Future with all his Italian practical
directness.
This is of great use when one considers with what sort of person the artist to-day
has to deal !
His certain success in England is similar to that of Giovanni tirasso. Any
spectacular display of temperament carries away the English crowd. With an
Italian crowd it has not the same effect. This popular orator again possesses
qualities which attach him on the one baud to a vitality possessed by all artists a cut
above the senile prig, and on the other hand he has access to the vitality of the
People.
3. Futurism, then, in its narrow sense and in the history of modern Painting,
Is a pictureque, superficial and romantic rebellion of young Milanese painters against
the Academism which surrounded them*
(xiao Sevcrlni was the most important. Severini, with his little blocks, strips
and triangles of colour, " zones " of movement, etc., made many excellent plastic
discoveries. I say " was " because to-day there are practically no Futurists, or at
least, Automobiliste, let*. Bulla is the best painter of what was once the Automobilist
group.
143
4. Modernity, for Severki, consisted in the night calls of Paris. It Is .doubt-
ful whether the Future (of his or any one else's ISM) will contain such places.
We all foresee, as I have argued in another place, in a century or so men and
women being put to bed at 7 o'clock by a state nurse (in separate beds, of course!) .
No cocottes for Ginos of the Future !
With their careful choice of motor omnibuses, cars, lifes, aeroplanes, etc., the
Automobilist pictures were too " picturesque," melodramatic and spectacular,
besides being undigested and naturalistic to a fault.
Severini only seemed to me to escape, by his feeling for pattern, and certain
clearness and restraint (even in the excesses of a gigantic set-piece) .
The Melodrama of Modernity is the subject of these fanciful but rather con-
ventional Italians.
Romance about science is a thing we have all been used to for many years,
and we resent it being used as a sauce for a dish claiming to belong strictly to
emancipated Futures.
A motor omnibus can be just as romantically seen as Carisbrooke Castle or
Shakespeare's house at Stratford,
I do not hold a brief opposed to Romance, but most of the Futurist work, is in
essence as sentimental as Boccioni's large earlier picture at the Sackvllle Gallery
Show, called the BUILDING OF A CITY.
This was sheer unadulturated Belgian romance : blue clouds of smoke, pawing
horses, heroic grimy workers, sententious sky=scrapers, factory chimneys' etc.
If, divested of this element oi illustration, H. G. Wells romance, and pedantic
naturalism, Marinetti's movement could produce profounder visions with this faith
of novelty, something fine might be done.
For it does not matter what incentive the artist has to creation.
Schiller always kept a few rotten pears in his drawer, and when he felt the time
had come to write another lyric, he would go to bis drawer and take out a rotten
pear. He would sniff and sniff. When he felt the lyric rising from the depths of
him In response, he would put the pear back and seize the pen.
If " dynamic " considerations intoxicate Baila and make him produce significant
patterns (as they do) , all is well.
5. But as I have said, Balla is not a " Futurist " in the Automobilist sense.
He is a rather violent and geometric sort of Expressionist.
His paintings are purely abstract : he does not give you bits of automobiles, or
complete naturalistic fragments of noses and ears, or any of the AutomobUUt bag
of tricks, in short.
So in the present and latest exhibition of Futurists at the Dore Gallery there
are no Futurists left, except perhaps the faithful lieutenant Boccioni : although he
too becomes less representative and more abstract every day.
As to the rest, they seem to have become unite conventional and dull Cubists
or Picassoists, with nothing left of their still duller Automobilism but letters and
bits of newspaper stuck all over the place.
6. Cannot Marinetti, sensible and energetic man that he is, be induced to
throw over this sentimental rubbish about Automobiles and Aeroplanes, and follow
his Mend Bella into a purer region of art? Unless he wants to become a rapidly
fossilizing monument of puerility, cheap reaction and sensationalism, he had
better do so.
1«
THE EXPLOITATION OF VULGARITY.
When an ugly or uncomely person appeared on the horizon of their daily
promenade, Ingres' careful wife would raise her shawl protectingly, and he would
be spared a sight that would have offended him.
To-day the Artist's attention would be drawn, on the contrary, to anything
particularly hideous or banal, as a thing not to be missed.
Stupidity has always been exquisite and ugliness fine.
Aristophanes loved a fool as much as any man his shapely sweetheart.
Perhaps his weakness for fools dulled his appreciation of the Sages.
No doubt in a perfectly " wholesome," classic state of existence, Humour
would be almost absent, and discords would be scrupulously shunned, or exist only
as a sacred disease that an occasional man was blighted with.
We don't want to-day things made entirely of gold (but gold mixed with flint
or grass, diamond with paste, etc.) any more than a monotonous paradise or security
would be palatable.
But the condition of our enjoyment of vulgarity, discord, cheapness or noise is
an unimpaired and keen disgust with it.
It depends, that is, on sufficient health, not to relinquish the consciousness of
what is desirable and beneficial.
Rare and cheap, fine and poor, these contrasts are the male and female, the
principle of creation to-day.
This pessimism is the triumphant note in modern art.
A man could make just as fine an art in discords, and with nothing but " ugly "
trivial and terrible materials, as any classic artist did with only " beautiful " and
pleasant means.
'But it would have to be a very tragic and pure creative instinct.
Life to-day is giddily frank, and the fool is everywhere serene and blatant.
Human insanity has never flowered so colossally.
Our material of discord is to an unparalleled extent forcible and virulent.
Pleasantness, too, has an edge or a softness of unusual strength.
The world may, at any moment, take a turn, and become less vulgar and stupid.
The great artist must not miss this opportunity.
But he must not so dangerously identity himself with vulgarity as Picasso, f<*r
instance, inclines to identify himself with the appearance of Nature.
There are possibilities for the great artist in the picture postcttfcL
The ice is thin, and there is as well the perpetual peril OS virtd<teU&
±45
THE IMPROVEMENT OF LIFE.
The passion of his function to order and trasmute, is exasperated in the artist
of to-day, by vacuity and complcafion, as it was in the case of the imitators of
Romanticism before " Wild Nature."
One of the most obvious questions that might have been put to any naturalistic
painter of twenty years ago, or for that matter to Rembrandt or a Japanese, was this :
Is there no difference, or if so, what difference, between a bad piece of architec-
ture or a good piece represented in a painting, or rather would it be a greater type
of art that had for representative content objects finer in themselves?
This kind of argument, of course, refers only to the representative painter.
Rembrandt might have replied that there is no fine man or poor man, that
vulgarity is as good as nobleness : that in his paintings all things were equal. But
iu taking Rembrandt the point may be confused by sentimentality about a great
artist, " touching " old beggar man, " souI=paittting," etc.
(Just as profound sentimentality might arise about Newness, Brand Newness,
as about age, ruins, mould and dilapidation.)
Every one admits that the interior of an A. B. C. shop is not as fine as the
interior of some building conceived by a great artist.
Yet it would probably inspire an artist to=day better than the more perfect
building. <
.With its trivial ornamentation, mirrors, cheap marble tables, silly spacing, etc.:
it nevertheless suggests a thousand great possibilities for the painter.
Where is the advantage, then, for the painter to-day, for Rembrandt or for a
Japanese, in having a better standard of taste in architecture, finer dresses, etc ?
2. If it were not that vulgarity and the host of cheap artisans compete in
earning with the true artist immesurably more than in a " great period of art," the
Present would be an ideal time for creative genius.
Adverse climatic conditions — drastic Russian winters, for example — account for
much thought and profundity.
England which stands for anti= Art, mediocrity and brainliness among the nations
of Europe, should be the most likely place lor great Art to spring up*
England is just as unkind and mimical to Art as the Arctic zone is to Life.
, This is the Siberia of the mind.
If you grant this, you will at once see the source and reason of my very genuine
optimism.
OUR VORTEX.
I.
Our vortex is not afraid of the Past : it has forgotten it's existence.
Our vortex regards the Future as as sentimental as the Past.
The Future is distant, like the Past, and therefore sentimental.
The mere element " Past " must be retained to sponge up and absorb our
melancholy.
Everything absent, remote, requiring projection in the veiled weakness of the
mind, is sentimental.
The Present can be intensely sentimental — especially if you exclude the mere
element " Past."
Our vortex does not deal in reactive Action only, nor identify the Present with
numbing displays of vitality.
The new vortex plunges to the heart of the Present.
The chemistry of the Present is different to that of the Past. With this different
chemistry we produce a New Living Abstraction.
The Rembrandt Vortex swamped the Netherlands with a flood of dreaming.
The Turner Vortex rushed at Europe with a wave of light.
We wish the Past and Future with as, the Past to mop up our melancholy, ta*
Future to absorb our troublesome optimism.
With our Vortex the Present is the only active thing.
Life is the Past and the Future.
The Present is Art.
II-
Our Vortex insists on water— tight compartments.
There is so Presents-there is Past and Future, and there is Aft.
147
Any moment not weakiy relaxed and slipped back, «r, on die other hand,
dreaming optimistically, to Art.
" Just Life " or soi>disant " Reality " is a fourth quantity, made up of the Part,
the Future and Art.
This impure Present our Vertex despises and ignores.
For our Vortex is uncompromising.
We must have the Past and the Future, Life simple, that is, to discharge
ourselves in, and keep us pure for non*Iife, that is Art,
The Past and Future are the prostitutes Nature has provided.
Art is periodic escapes from this Brothel.
Artists put as much vitality and delight into this saintliness, and escape out, as
most men do their escapes into similar places from respectable existence.
The Vorticist is at his maximum point of energy when stillest.
The Vorticist is not the Slave of Commotion, but it's Master.
The Vorticist does not suck up to Life.
He lets Life know its place in a Vorticist Universe I
III.
In a Vorticist Universe we don't get excited at what we have invented.
If we did it would look as though it had been a fluke.
It is not a fluke.
We have no Verbotens.
There is one Truth, ourselves, and everything is permitted.
But we are not Templars.
We are proud, handsome and predatory.
We hunt machines, they are our favourite game.
We invent them and then hunt them down.
This i&M great Vorticist age, a great still age of artists.
14S
IF.
At to the leas belated Impressionism at present attempting to eke out a little
ttfe In these islands :
Our Vortex Is led up with your dispersals, reasonable chicken- men.
Our Vortex is proud of its polished sides.
Our Vortex will not hear of anything but its disastrous polished dance.
Our Vortex desires the immobile rythm of its swiftness*
Our Vortex rushes out lfte an angry dog at your Impressionistic fuss.
Our Vortex Is white and abstract with its red-hot swiftness.
1(9
FREDERICK SPENCER GORE.
Born in 1879, Gore died oa March 27th, 1914, of pneumonia, after an Illness
of three days.
Had he lived, his dogged, almost romantic industry, his passion for the delicate
objects set in the London atmosphere around him, his grey conception of the artist's
life, his gentleness and fineness, would have matured into an abundant personal art,
something like Corot and Gessing,
His habit of telling yon of things he had his eye on and intended painting three
years hence, and all his system of work was with reference to minute and persistent
labour, implying a good spell of life, which almost retarded accomplishment.
He projected himself into the years of work before him, and organized queerly
what was to be done. He possessed physically, a busy time three years away, as
much as to-day.
A boastfully confident attitude to Time's expanse, and absence of recognition
of the common need to hurry, characterized him.
Death cut all this short to the dismay of those who had known him from the
start, and regarded, confidently like him, this great artist and dear friend as a
permanent thing in their lives, and his work as in safe hands and sure of due fulfilment
His leisureliness and confidence were infectious.
His painting as it is, although incomplete, is full of illustrations of a maturer
future. His latest work, with an accentuation of structural qualities, a new and
suave simplicity, might, in the case of several examples I know, be placed beside
that of any of the definitely gracious artists in Europe.
The welter of pale and rather sombre colour filling London backwards, the
rather distant, still and sultry well-being of a Camden Town summer, in trivial
crescents with tall trees and toy trains, was one of his favourite themes.
He was a painter of the London summer, of heavy dull sunlight, of exquisite,
respectable and stodgy houses, more than anybody else.
The years he spent working on scenes from the London music=ha!ls brought to
light a new world of witty illusion. I much prefer Gore's paintings of the theatre
to Degas'. Gore gets everything that Degas with his hard and rather paltry science
apparently did not see.
He had an admirable master for his drawing in Mr. Walter Sickirt, to whose
advice and friendship he no doubt owed more than to anybody elses.
But he was quite independent of Mr. Sickert, or of any group of artists, and even
diametrically opposed to many of his friends in his feeling towards the latest move*
ment in painting, which from the first he gave his word for. Some of his work
towards the end belonged rather to this present movement than to any other.
The memorial exhibition of his work shortly to be held should, if possible, since
the Cabaret Club has closed, contain the large paintings he did for that place.
ISO
TO SUFFRAGETTES,
A WORD OF ADVICE.
IN DESTRUCTION, AS IN OTHER THINGS,
stick to what you understand.
WE MAKE YOU A PRESENT OF OUR VOTES.
ONLY LEAVE WORKS OF ART ALONE.
YOU MIGHT SOME DAY DESTROY A
GOOD PICTURE BY ACCIDENT.
THEN !
MAIS SOYEZ BONNES FILLES!
NOUS VOUS AIMONS!
WE ADMIRE YOUR ENERGY. YOU AND ARTISTS
ARE THE ONLY THINGS (YOU DON'T MIND
BEING CALLED THINGS ?) LEFT IN ENGLAND
WITH A LITTLE LIFE IN THEM.
151
IF YOU DESTROY A GREAT WORK OF ART you
are destroying a greater soul than if you
annihilated a whole district of London.
LEAVE ART ALONE, BRAVE COMRADES!
16ft
Brighton Pier
.Spencer Gore.
. . :.■.■.. .-. S2S . ■ ■. i
Richmond Houses
Spencer Gore.
VORTEX.
POUND.
The vortex is the point of maximum energy,
It represents, in mechanics, the greatest efficiency,
We use the words " greatest efficiency ,s in the precise sense — as they would be
used in a text book of MECHANICS.
You may think of man as that toward which perception moves. You may think
ol him as the TOY of circumstance, as the plastic substance RECEIVING
impressions. ;
OR you may think of him as DIRECTING a certain fluid force against
circumstance, as CONCEIVING instead of merely observing and reflecting,
THE PRIMARY PIGMENT.
The vorticist relies on this alone ; on the primary pigment of his art,
nothing else,
Every conception, every emotion presents itself to the vivid consciousness in
some primary form,
It is the picture that means a hundred poems, the music that means a hundred
pictures, the most highly energized statement, the statement that has not yet SPENT
itself it expression, but which is the most capable of expressing.
THE TURBINE.
All experience rushes into this vortex, AH the energized past, all the past that
is living and worthy to live. All MOMENTUM, which is the past bearing upon us,
RACE, RACE-MEMORY, instinct charging the PLACID,
NON-ENERGIZED FUTURE,
The DESIGN of the future in the grip of the human vortex. AH the past that
is vital, all the past that is capable of living into the future, is pregnant in the
vortex, NOW.
Hedonism is the vacant place of a vortex, without force, deprived of past and of
future, the vertex of a stil spool or cone.
Futurism is the disgorging spray of a vortex with no drive behind it,
DISPERSAL.
153
EVERY CONCEPT, EVERY EMOTION PRESENTS ITSELF TO
THE VIVID CONSCIOUSNESS IN SOME PRIMARY FORM. IT
BELONGS TO THE ART OF THIS FORM. IF SOUND, TO MUSIC ;
IF FORMED WORDS, TO LITERATURE ; THE IMAGE, TO POETRY ;
FORM, TO DESIGN ; COLOUR IN POSITION, TO PAINTING ; FORM
OR DESIGN IN THREE PLANES, to SCULPTURE ; MOVEMENT TO
THE DANCE OR TO THE RHYTHM OF MUSIC OR OF VERSES.
Elaboration, expression of second intensities, of dispersed ness belong to the
secondary sort of artist. Dispersed arts HAD a vortex.
Impressionism, Futurism, which is only an accelerated sort of impressionism,
DENY the vortex. They are the CORPSES of VORTICES. POPULAR
BELIEFS, movements, etc., are the CORPSES OF VORTICES. Marinetti
is a corpse.
THE MAN.
The vorticist relies not upon similarity or analogy, not upon likeness or mimcry.
In painting he does not rely upon the likeness to a beloved grandmother or to
a caressable mistress.
VORTICISM is art before it has spread itself into a state of iacidtty, of
elaboration, of secondary applications.
ANCESTRY.
*• AH arts approach the conditions of music." — Pater.
" An Image is that which presents an intellectual and emotional complex hi an
Instant of time." — Pound.
" You are interested in a certain painting because it is an arrangement of lines
and colours." — Whistler.
Picasso, Kandinskl, father and mother, classicism and romanticism of the
movement.
POETRY.
The vorticist will use only the primary media of his art.
The primary pigment of poetry is the IMAGE.
The vorticist will not allow the primary expression of any concept or emotion
to drag itself out into mimicry.
In painting Kandinskl, Picasso.
In poetry this by, '" H. D."
Whirl up sea
Whirl your pointed pines,
Splash your great pines
On our rocks,
Hurl your green over us.
Cover us with your pools o! Br.
1MJ
VORTEX,
GAUDIER BRZESKA
Sculptural energy is the mountain.
Sculptural feeling is the appreciation of masses In relation.
Sculptural ability is the defining of these masses by planes.
The PALEOLITHIC VORTEX resulted in the decoration of the Dordogne
caverns.
Early stone*age man disputed the earth with animals.
His livelihood depended on the hazards of the hunt— his greatest victory the
domestication of a few species.
Out of the minds primordially preoccupied with animals Fonts<de-Gaume gained
its procession of horses carved in the rock. The driving power was life in the
absolute — the plastic expression the fruitful sphere.
The sphere is thrown through space, it is the soul and object of the vortex —
The intensity of existence had revealed to man a truth of form — his manhood
was strained to the highest potential — his energy brutal — HIS OPULENT
MATURITY WAS CONVEX.
The acute fight subsided at the birth of the three primary civilizations. It
always retained more intensity East.
The H AMITE VORTEX of Egypt, the land of plenty-
Man succeeded in his far reaching speculations — Honour to the divinity J
Religion pushed him to the use of the VERTICAL which inspires awe. His
gods were self made, he built them in his image, and RETAINED AS MUCH
OF THE SPHERE AS COULD ROUND THE SHARPNESS OF THE
PARALLELOGRAM.
He prfeerred the pyramid to the oastaba.
The fair Greek felt this influence across ^k middle sen.
15S
The fair Greek saw himself only. HE petrified his own semblance.
HIS SCULPTURE WAS DERIVATIVE his feeling far form secondary.
The absence of direct energy lasted for a thousand years.
The Indians felt the hamitie influence through Greek spectacles. Their extreme
temperament inclined towards asceticism, admiration of non*desire as a balance
against abuse produced a kind of sculpture without new form perception — and which
is the result of the peculiar
VORTEX OF BLACKNESS AND SILENCE.
PLASTIC SOUL IS INTENSITY OF LIFE BURSTING THE
PLANE.
The Germanic barbarians were verily whirled by the mysterious need of
acquiring new arable lands. They moved restlessly, like strong oxen stampeding.
The SEMITIC VORTEX was the lust of war. The men of Elam, of Assnr,
of Bebel and the Kheta, the men Armenia and those of Canaan had to slay each
other crully for the possession of fertile valleys. Their gods sent them the vertical
direction, the earth, the SPHERE.
They elevated the sphere in a splendid squatness and created the
HORIZONTAL.
From Sargon to Amir*nasir°pal men built man*headed bulls in horizontal
flight = walk, Men flayed their their capthes alive and erected howling lions : THE
ELONGATED HORIZONTAL SPHERE BUTTRESSED ON FOUR
COLUMNS, and their kingdoms disappeared.
Christ flourished and perished in Yudah.
Christianity gained Africa, and from the seaports of the Mediterranean it won
the Roman Empire.
The stampeding Franks came into violent contact with it as well as with the
Groeco=Roman tradition.
They were swamped by the remote reflections of the two vortices of the West.
Gothic sculpture was but a faint echo of the HAMITO-SEMITIC energies
through Roman traditions, and it lasted half a thousand years, and it wilfully
divagated again into the Greek derivation from the land of Ameh-Ra.
VORTEX OF A VORTEX II
VORTEX IS THE POINT ONE AND INDIVISIBLE!
v VORTEX IS ENERGY I and it gave forth SOLID EXCREMENTS ia
the quattro £ cinquo cento, LIQUID until the seventeenth century, GASES whistfe
till now. THIS is the history of form value hi the West until the FALL OF
IMPRESSIONISM.
Tin black-haired men who wandered through the pass of Khetan tote the
valley of the YELLOW RIVER lived peacefully tilling their lands, and they grew
prosperous.
Their paleolithic feeling was intensified. As gods they had themselves in the
persons of their human ancestors — and of the spirits of the horse and of the land and
the grain.
THE SPHERE SWAYED.
THE VORTEX WAS ABSOLUTE.
The Shang and Chow dynasties produced the convex bronze vases.
The features of Tao-t'ie were inscribed inside of the square with the rounded
corners — the centuple spherical frog presided over the inverted truncated cone that
is the bronze war drum.
THE VORTEX WAS INTENSE MATURITY. Maturity is fecunditty^
they grew numerous and it lasted for six thousand years.
The force relapsed and they accumlated wealth, forsook their work, and after
losing their form-understanding through the Han and T'ang dynasties, they founded
the Ming and found artistic ruin and sterility.
THE SPHERE LOST SIGNIFICANCE AND THEY ADMIRED
THEMSELVES.
During their great period off-shoots from their race had landed on another
continent. — After many wanderings some tribes settled on the highlands of Yukatan
and Mexico.
When the Ming were losing their conception, these net-Mongols had a flourishing
state. Through the strain of warfare they submitted the Chinese sphere to
horizontal treatment much as the Semites had done. Their cruel nature and
temperament supplied them with a stimulant: THE VORTEX OF DESTRUC-
TION.
Besides these highly developed peoples there lived on the world other races
inhabiting Africa and the Ocean islands.
When we first knew them they were very near the paleolithic stage. Though
they were not so much dependent upon animals their expenditure of energy was wide,
for they began to till the land and practice crafts rationally, and they fell into con-
templation before their sex : the site of their great energy : THEIR CONVEX
MATURITY.
They pulled the sphere lengthways and made the cylinder, this is the VORTEX
OF FECUNLITY, and it has left us the masterpleiceis that a*e knowss as Wve
chasms.
The soil was hard, material difficult to win from nature, storms frequent, as
also fevers and other epidemics. {They got frightened : This is the VORTEX OF
FEAR, its mass is the POINTED CONE, its masterpieces the fettshas.
And WE the moderns : Epstein, Brancusi, Archipenko, Dunifcowski,
ModigUani, and myself, through the incessant struggle in the complex city, have
likewise to spend much energy.
The knowledge of our civilisation embraces the world, we have mastered the
elements.
We have been influenced by what we liked most, each according to his own
individuality, we have crystallized the sphere into the cube, we have made a com-
bination of all the possible shaped masses — concentrating them to express our
abstract thoughts of conscious superiority.
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